GitanesBlondes wrote:How we view the myths and legends in F1 are due to them in part being born out of blood and fire so to speak. It's why this current era is never going to be remembered as anything remarkable as the years roll onward.
The legends are legends because they are left in the past. They also are legends because of contrast with present. And I also don't think that people would discard years since 1994.
GitanesBlondes wrote:With that said, one way I would put it to you is, who are we to question the choices any of these men made to go racing even when the end of the line came by way of death in a race car?
Were they really given a choice? It is a different thing to choose a safer racing vs no racing. Were safety initiatives ever protested by the drivers? I know some refused to attach seatbelts properly but that was out of notion that seatbelts made it harder to leave the car in case of fire.
GitanesBlondes wrote:Do I wish they hadn't died? Absolutely, but I also don't lose sleep over it. My philosophical view of it is that things played out as they were supposed to.
One can't change the past but learn from it and change future.
GitanesBlondes wrote:I never said anything about sleeping with junkie prostitutes. Perhaps its my fault for not clarifying that I was referencing being with a normal female, not a junkie. But I also wasn't expecting someone to make use of mental gymnastics in the manner you did.
So you too want to minimize risk if possible. Getting virus from a single intercourse with a HIV positive person is not 100% guarantee of getting infection, it's actually pretty low. There are also people who are immune to it. It is always about what degree of risk is acceptable and what you have to do to diminish it.