Response to Warnings

A List of Examples of Warnings

  1. road signs
  2. fog horns
  3. vehicle sirens and horns
  4. broadcast storm alerts
  5. light houses
  6. channel buoys
  7. depth markers
  8. engagement, wedding rings
  9. fuel gauges
  10. burglar alarms
  11. train whistles
  12. teeth baring
  13. animal growls
  14. rattlesnake rattles
  15. canary in the mine
  16. yellow traffic light
  17. hand gestures
  18. facial expressions
  19. noxious smells
  20. litmus test
  21. blood meters
  22. high, low marks
  23. sores. rashes
  24. a parent's admonition
  25. thunder, lightning
  26. weather forcast
  27. a policy statement
  28. rules, laws
  29. appearances of the sky
  30. movie ratings
  31. ratings of objects for consumers
  32. baseball warning track

"I didn't know my son's signals until after he died," said a character in a movie. Then she tried to learn everything she could about teen suicide. Now she could decipher the signals she couldn't read before the fact. (The film reviewed: "Silence of the Heart".) None of the acts of potential suicides are recognized as the distress signals they are.

Two geologists working in the summit area of El Chichón in Mexico (March-April, 1981) felt earthquakes and heard loud noises. In September, they wrote a report warning of "high volcanic risk". "The warning went unheeded, and the eruption seven months later claimed at least 2,000 human lives." (Science News, 8/21/82)

In July, 1976, 26 children of Chowchilla, CA, were kidnapped and held hostage for 27 hours, affecting them with degrees of serious psychological distress for a long time after. One of them believed he had failed to heed a warning that might have prepared him for the kidnapping. His father had taken him to a movie a year earlier in which kids in a school bus had been briefly hijacked. The father asked him what he'd have done in such a circumstance. The son said he didn't know, but after he was really kidnapped he blamed himself for his lack of awareness.

Animal premonitions are being studied to forecast quake events. The aim is to set up volunteer reporting networks of animal handlers keeping an eye on over 200 species. Researchers record any variation in hotline calls. A quake in Hollister, CA, was a first test. There was no significant jump in calls for that area. After the quake, "some 75 rueful observers called in to confess they'd noticed odd prequake activity and failed to report it. (Psychology Today, Feb., 1980)

Human premonitions were studied by a seismologist, looking at predictions of sensitives, professional geoscientists, amateur scientists, psychics, astrologers, and religious visionaries, compared to quake predictions made randomly by a computer. The "sensitives" showed a slight statistical advantage over the others, but no individuals or groups did significantly better than chance. The amateur scientists, astrologers and psychics did significantly less well.

Fran Koster (Why People Don't Listen to Warnings: With Discussion of Implications for Futurists. University of Massachusetts. ERIC Microfiche ED 152674) found that responses to warnings differed according to the extent to which the event was unfamiliar, sudden, unexpected, and localized. She gives strategies for effective warnings for diminishing oil supplies, water shortages, nuclear explosions, petroleum related accidents, insecticide poisonings, the collapse of the social security system, etc. Key ingredients are the education of leaders to be good warners and increasing the efficacy of communication media

What is the duty of carriers of the herpes virus, or any other contagion, to give warnings to close partners?

Does a general, color-coded warning system meet the needs of people to know of a danger, or does such a system merely teach the public to discount and devalue any warnings that are to be given? Remember the tale of the boy who cried "WOLF!" too often?

What has been the result of warnings given for the coming pandemic of "bird flu"?
The coming of "global warming"?
The great quake on the West Coast?
The growing drought cycle?
The effects of cigarette smoking?
The onset of type 2 diabetes due to diet, body weight, and exercise deficiencies?
The next Katrina?
A terrorist attack in the U.S.?
What specific preparations are being made?
Who is preparing?
What is the nature of the warning?
Who is our best public warner?
Is whistle-blowing a form of warning?
Should we have a national assessment and a bureau or
office making public warnings with a highly credible public "warner-in-chief"?

Warning labels mandated by the FDA are everywhere and can mean life-or-death to some. But some producers and politicians have played politics with the FDA for commercial gain. Shame on them. Shame! Shame! Shame! How many people read the labels on food stuff and the fine print that comes with drugs, stock and bond offerings, toys, and gadgets of all kinds?

People who play dumb must work extremely hard to overcome the effects of their stupidity.

People who use their intelligence before the fact find it easier to live with the consequences of their acts.

"UNANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES" mostly results in tragedy. Or, killing the messenger.

It appears that the jails are crammed full of those who could not anticipate consequences, which were overridden by egoism of passion, greed, self-gratification, a compassion deficit, anger, lust, and other corruptions of REASON, as well as preferences for speed, adventure, danger, chance, excitement, psycho-tropic substances, and other corruptions of SANITY.

"—and the goblins will get ya if ya don't watch out!!"

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(Last updated on June 8, 2006 )

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