How will you soothe your conscience when you realized: you impaired the safety of your loved ones for a couple of bucks a month AND didn't even bother following the instructions to prevent it
On Wed, 23 Mar 2005 12:38:22 -0800, Gary VanderMolen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Unfortunately it is not always the person making the omission who suffers. > How will you explain to a 14-year-old girl, babysitting at someone else's > house, > why 911 failed to work while some pervert was breaking down the back door? > > Gary VanderMolen > > ----- Original Message ----- > > *shrug* as someone said, then it's up to the parent to set up Vonage > > correctly beforehand. > > > > As someone here asked, "is 911 a privelege or a right" in my book, it's > > 100% a privelege. > > > > As long as Vonage warns you up front that you have a requirement to set it > > up, then the ball is in your court. And if you elect > > to not set it up, fine. They aren't your babysitter, you're the one who > > had to take the actions. Automobile makers provide > > seat belts, if you choose not to use them, your bad. If you ride around on > > a motorcycle without a helmet, fine, you take the > > risk. > > -- -jmg Chaos often breeds life, when order breeds habit. Henry Brooks Adams [1838-1918]
