The articles say she practices in Kalaheo Hawaii, which is a small town on the island of Kauai. So yeah, backwater & podunk. I’d hazard a guess that she was at the beach when the accident occurred, and decided it was safer to transport the patient herself than wait for an ambulance to come from Lihue.
Apparently she was out surfing, saw (or heard) the boat hit him, and used her surfboard to carry him in to the beach.
Now you have a copy on some content distribution server under an account controlled by you. And whose bandwidth you’re free to use. And you can favorite the url of the icon in your browser as a way to remember where you stowed it. Then copy/paste your url from your favorite into your posts whenever you need it.
And certainly I could do the very same thing for me.
All of which does nothing to put that icon into the post editing UI for our non-technical users = everyone else to use.
The Board policy goal I was lobbying for (inside this rapidly growing hijack) was that all the traditional SDMB emoticons be added to the official Discourse emoticon catalog so non-technical folks could use them as they did in the Olden Dayes.
ETA: Interesting … I originally quoted your whole post including the icon reference. When I tried to save the post Discourse barfed back that I couldn’t save a post with in image in it. Never seen that before. So I removed the url and it saved fine.
Perhaps they don’t like images in quotes. I can understand that. But if so they really need a better error message.
Well surprise surprise. Sez here, that photo was staged!
ETA: This addresses my question, above, if it was professional to take a photo and publish it of the patient.
ETA-2: Is there something sexist going on here, that the original incident involved a female victim, but the re-enactment portrayed a male victim?
Pure guesswork on my part, but …
If the event involved a bunch of stuff in the upper chest area being injured, naked, or needing surgery done to it, it’s much easier to broadcast a re-enactment if the patient re-enactor is male.
So if sexist, it’s because society is squeamish about seeing certain parts of human anatomy.
I’m having a hard time understanding why the man would volunteer for such a terrible leg injury just for a reenactment
It’s called special effects mate
when a movie has flashbacks to the main character’s childhood they don’t have to wait 20 years between shooting scenes;)
Tell that to Richard Linklater.