US Responsible?

@laglen (19759)
United States
February 9, 2011 8:17am CST
Last week, a man by the name of Wildrick Guerrire died in Haiti of Cholera. His fiancee blames the US Government for deporting him and therefore causing his death. Why was he deported you may ask? For a felony charge. He was a guest in our country due to the earthquake. He committed a crime therefore losing his invitation. I am sorry he died. I am sorry his fiancee is upset. But to blame DHS for doing their job? no way! That just pisses me off. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/07a20d18-33a8-11e0-b1ed-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1DTFiaImr what do you think? Do you think US is liable? How long do you think it will take until the US pays her off for her loss?
1 person likes this
4 responses
@epicure35 (2814)
• United States
12 Feb 11
Scripture says "Woe to those who call good evil and evil good." No good can come from doing evil and it's time we stopped making excuses for people who insist on doing wrong and then want to escape the consequences of their own actions. The fact that DHS "did its job" is highly unusual, but, in this case, a step in the right direction. The "blame" and excuse game should never work for thoses intent on criminal, felonious behavior. Talk about "bite the hand that feeds you"! This woman's sense of "entitlement" is beyond absurd.
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@laglen (19759)
• United States
13 Feb 11
I agree dear..
@laglen (19759)
• United States
18 Feb 11
You are so right. I think people have forgotten how to be responsible, how great it feels to be successful!
@epicure35 (2814)
• United States
13 Feb 11
It all hinges on the word "responsibility", something modern day societies teach us to avoid. Secularists believe we are accountable only to ourselves.
1 person likes this
@Latrivia (2878)
• United States
9 Feb 11
Well there's no point in blaming the Haitian government - there's no money in it. If Haitian refugees don't want to get deported, then they shouldn't commit crimes. Is it really that hard to figure out?
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@laglen (19759)
• United States
10 Feb 11
Thats what I thought. and a felony no less. In my opinion, the could not have deported him fast enough
@matersfish (6306)
• United States
9 Feb 11
I don't blame the woman for blaming the US. This type of crap is the road we've paved ourselves. When a moron like Dennis Kucinich is too stupid to check an olive for a pit and then decides to take legal action because he's an utter tool, that's really the cap on it all. Blame someone else! The coffee was actually HOT? McDonalds' fault! Slipped on a wet floor? Oh, the mop and bucket and WET FLOOR wasn't enough to give you a clue. It's the store's fault! What really surprises me here is the US deported someone.
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@laglen (19759)
• United States
10 Feb 11
I was surprised too ... and impressed! I agree the law suits are out of hand. I really need to pay better attention to how people wrong me. I could be rich
@hofferp (4734)
• United States
9 Feb 11
No, the U.S. isn't liable and I better not find out we gave her money... If DHS or any other agency does, I think we should take the money out of the person's, who signed the release of funds, pocket. Maybe the next time, he/she and/or others may not be so carefree with my/our money.
1 person likes this
@laglen (19759)
• United States
10 Feb 11
It will probably be the courts that award it. Sad situation.