this IS what's becoming of Our Country ...internet game fucking play station/x~box / fan~tasy league playing ...pussy's ...e~fem~it~is~men... will slaughter 10 million zomb's ,were's , ALL manner of monster's ...but in REAL Life ....puff ...surprised NOT a 1 of em stopped & got a selfie ... before a man showed up WTF ...wonder what "their" women think of em after seeing "their" men in action, huh
Hartville, OH — Uniontown police Sgt., Michael Batchik responded to a 9-1-1 call at Hartville Marketplace last week of a person trapped in a vehicle which was on fire.Apparently the victim crashed into the vehicle in front of his after apparently passing out with his foot on the accelerator.
When Batchik pulled up to the scene he quickly and selflessly throws himself into harms way to rescue the unconscious man inside the dangerously smokey vehicle; which could have exploded at any moment.
Moments after Batchik disappears into the smoke he’s seen pulling the unconscious man away from the SUV.
Uniontown Police Sgt. Batchik drags unconscious man from burning car. September 2014
For his courage and selflessness, Sgt. Batchik deserves credit and the Free Thought Project would like to extend that to him.Now on to the disturbing part of this video. When Batchik pulls up to the scene there are over a dozen people staring at the unconscious man who is potentially dying from smoke inhalation, or worse, an exploding car.
Why on earth didn’t any of the bystanders pull the man from the vehicle? Sure, one or two of them were spraying fire extinguishers, but that can actually do more harm than good to an already asphyxiating individual as it pulls all the oxygen out of the immediate air.
Batchik did not have a respirator nor did he have fire proof clothing on, yet without hesitation, he stepped in and saved a life.
Has society become so dependent upon police action to solve problems that stepping in to save a dying man didn’t even appear as an option to these folks?
Sure dialing 9-1-1 may seem like a rational idea when seeing a burning car, but had first responders been any further away than they actually were, this man may have very well died. Actions save live, not calls for help….When seconds count, police are usually minutes away.
Matt Agorist’s article was originally published at The Free Thought Project.
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