Kissing can relieve allergies:
Scientists based at the Satou hospital in Japan found that kissing worked by relaxing the body and reducing the production of histamine – a chemical that the body produces in response to pollen, causing the sneezing, runny noses and streaming eyes that characterise hay fever attacks.
The researchers asked a total of 24 couples, where both partners suffered from hay fever, to spend 30 minutes kissing.
Blood samples were taken before and after to compare levels of histamine, and results showed that after the kissing session levels of the chemical were significantly reduced.
This was not found to be the case, however, when the experiment was repeated with cuddling but no kissing, with no change in histamine levels found.
Thirty minutes! I'll just take the claritin, thanks.
Sorry, not right, at least not in legal terms. Intent is probably the most critical factor in liability.
I'm sensing a confusion here between criminal and civil liability. Criminal liability requires intent (and since I haven't worked in criminal law since law school nearly 20 years ago, I'll stop there).
Civil liability generally only requires negligence. Taking Typo's car crash example, you could be civilly liable but not criminally liable. If that's the case, you'd have to compensate the person you hit, but you wouldn't have to do jail time or pay a fine to the government.
Pete - what about where there is no negligence. My example where a pedestrian steps out from between two parked cars, no way you could have seen him in time to stop. If there is proof that the pedestrian rather than the driver was negligent - there was nothing the driver could have reasonably done to nont hit the pedestrian - is there still civil liability?
Sorry, not right, at least not in legal terms. Intent is probably the most critical factor in liability.
I'm sensing a confusion here between criminal and civil liability. Criminal liability requires intent (and since I haven't worked in criminal law since law school nearly 20 years ago, I'll stop there).
I assumed lisah was talking about criminal liability only since she said
but it doesn't relieve you of the responsibility for having committed the illegal act!
and we're talking about the current Enron proceeding.
eh I was talking generally and generally out of my ass (which is fine but not very knowledgeable about law).
Typo, some fault is usually required for civil liability. If the pedestrian was the only one negligent, the driver shouldn't be liable.
Still tortured by GA whitefont.
Today I had 2 meetings already. Now down time.
My dinner last night became a semi-business dinner. And it lasted 2.5 hours. I was exhausted by the time I got to bed. That is too long for dinner with not friends.
"Stature?" Petrocelli asked incredulously. "He's antisocial! He loved building the business. He didn't like running the business and he wasn't very good at it. He made a lot of mistakes (but) a mistake is not a crime."
If you'd have been there / If you'd have seen it / how could you tell him that he was wrong?
If a sleazebag rips off his customers when no one's around, does he still make money?
The #1 threat is still bears:
Bears killed and ate a monkey in a Dutch zoo in front of horrified visitors, witnesses and the zoo said Monday. In the incident Sunday at the Beekse Bergen Safari Park, several Sloth bears chased the Barbary macaque into an electric fence, where it was stunned.
It recovered and fled onto a wooden structure, where one bear pursued and mauled it to death.
The park confirmed the killing in a statement, saying: "In an area where Sloth bears, great apes and Barbary macaques have coexisted peacefully for a long time, the harmony was temporarily disturbed during opening hours on Sunday."
Ignoring attempts by keepers to distract it, the bear climbed onto a horizontal pole, and, standing stretched on two legs, "used its sharp canines to pull the macaque, which was shrieking and resisting, from its perch."
The bear then brought the animal to a concrete den, where three bears ate it.