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Originally Posted by okiol
most of the answers i saw were great answers, some answers helped me. Very, very few answers focused completely on judging the ruling, without mentioning anything else.
If it's already been answered, why answer it again? The main point here is not to put yourself in a situation to have to worry about this ruling in the first place. Rather than tell you how to deal with broken legs, we prefer helping you learn not to cross the street against the light. That makes more sense, doesn't it? Often on this forum the questions asked don't directly lead to the answers needed. We tend to go a level deeper.
But here you go:
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
Should I be pissed about this Borgata ruling?
No.
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
My question is is that the correct ruling.
Yes.
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
Should this guy have gotten some sort of punishment.
A warning not to do it again, and that subsequent infractions will be handled more severely.
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
Does the ruling change since we're super deep in an mtt with a super fast structure.
No.
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
Thanks in advance for anyone's input.
You're welcome.
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
I got put up with being told "it doesn't matter" when it clearly does matter
It still doesn't matter. The ruling happened, move on. It just doesn't matter. It just doesn't matter. It just doesn't matter.
That's the answer to
any ruling, even if it's not the "correct" ruling. Once it happens, it's done. That's the point here. It doesn't matter. It's in the past. Focus on the present and the future.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SBlum2711
I wanted to know if the ruling was wrong.
No, it's not. Or maybe it was. Nobody can say for certain, because we weren't there. It seems right to me. I don't put myself in that kind of position in the first place, so it's not a ruling I need to worry about for myself. I suggest you do the same. You can avoid having broken legs in the first place, and not have to worry about the proper ways to mend them.
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Originally Posted by SBlum2711
what should've been the ruling.
So let's say you get the answer of, "Yes, that ruling was wrong."
What now? What does it change? What does it matter? What's the next move here?