cross-posted from: https://lemmit.online/post/4247006
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.
The original was posted on /r/onguardforthee by /u/SAJewers on 2024-10-24 21:32:00+00:00.
cross-posted from: https://lemmit.online/post/4247006
This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.
The original was posted on /r/onguardforthee by /u/SAJewers on 2024-10-24 21:32:00+00:00.
I want to know how she died. If that makes me a bad person, then so be it.
Curiousity doesn’t make you a bad person, it makes you a person.
Likely asphyxiation, and not the pleasant, “drift off on a carbon monoxide high” kind of asphyxiation. The “oh God, my lungs are melting and I can’t breathe” kind of asphyxiation. The only hope is that it got hot fast enough that her brain melted before her lungs, so she didn’t have time to understand the pain. All in all, it’s not a good way to go.
I don’t think Walmart spends that kind of money on their ovens
Yeah, the only way someone is dying in a furnace before feeling pain is if you’re dealing with molten-metal-type temperatures. Not a bakery oven. I’m sure this poor woman experienced excruciating pain for far too long.
I work at one of those furnaces, if you fall in molten metal it will not be fast. You are EXTREMELY buoyant in liquid rock/metal.
Absolutely terrifying… but thank you for the insight.
I think about it a lot while staring down into ‘The Pit’ on the production floor.
Knowing the how and why of workers’ deaths only makes you a bad person if you want it to happen again.
Why would that make you a bad person?
I was looking at it as kind of “morbid”, but your question is a good one.