Accidents Waiting to Happen

Being an educated stagemanager I have health and safety drummed into me. Nearly everywhere I look in Norway there is an accident waiting to happen – and yet it never does. I don’t get it – with all the wooden ladders still in use, all the city roofs without snow guards (for when the snow falls off onto the poor suckers underneath) or all the electrical leads just laying across city walk ways you’d think that Norway would be law-suit-heaven. But, nope. In fact, if a Norwegian does trip over a lead, gets pumbled by snow from walking too close to a building in winter or falls through a wooden ladder, they just get up and laugh about it. If you’re trigger happy enough to want to sue, the only law firm that would handle your case would be Your, Own & Fault Ltd.



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To visit the mountain during the Midnight Sun is a real treat.
The Norwegian smålens goose, or smålsensgås, is a heritage breed of Norway. Our smålensgjess arrived on the farm in September 2011.
Traditional Norwegian cuisine is based on natural resources.
Lathari beach is the only beach in Alta.
Decorating Easter eggs is a big tradition in Norway.
You wouldn’t want to live in the UK then… here’s it’s gone to overkill. Health & Safety has centre stage in everyone’s life, and some things are not allowed – “just in case it might happen”.
Sadly people in the UK no longer seem prepared to be responsible for themselves, and everything is now “someone else’s fault”. Before long the word “accident” will be removed from the Oxford English Dictionary!!
I agree with Helga’s comments as it is the same story in the U.S.A. It is never your own fault anymore, regardless of how stupid the act might have been. It is always ‘someone else’s fault’. Just ask the lawyer, he’ll verify your contention. It is no wonder that our insurance rates keep climbing.