• Baguette@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    11 hours ago

    That’s an extremely privileged take. Not everyone knows about what an MRI does. Don’t just judge someone’s education and circumstance like that.

    Common sense is that a person should be able to trust the medical professional. If the professional doesn’t properly warn them, how would they know?

    • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      It’s in almost every medical drama. It’s also explained to you by the personnel.

      Privileged is walking around with 20 pounds of shit strapped around your neck and expecting the world to yield to you.

      • Baguette@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 hours ago

        Again you make an assumption that people should automatically know about an MRI. I’m privileged enough to know because I love watching medical video essays and have the free time and access to do so. Not everyone has access to the same resources as you and I. Some people didn’t have the opportunity to go to college. Some people had no easy access to the internet when growing up. Some people don’t have time because they’re working 3 jobs to survive.

        I’m not going to insult someone because they don’t know about x thing, because education is meant to be for helping others, not belittling anyone you meet just because you know more than them. Your first instinct shouldn’t be to ridicule a deceased person for not knowing as much as you.

        Put into example it’s for a newfound medical examination that both you and I have no knowledge about. You trust the professional treating you that they know what they’re doing. A clinic isn’t going to assume you know every little detail about this. That’s the job of the clinic and their technician.

        You also conveniently ignore that the technician was with the said person when he entered the room, aka he trusted the technician that he wasn’t doing something wrong. It’s not a case of he’s not allowed to be there and just so happened to trespass in with metal. He TRUSTED the professional here that he was allowed in and that there wouldn’t be any issues. The technician failed by not making sure he didn’t have anything metal. They should’ve thoroughly checked and even double checked before letting him in.

        • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          3 hours ago

          Knowledge about how many things work in the society you live in isn’t privilege, it’s fucking common sense.

          Also, walking around with a 20 pound fucking necklace is stupid, and especially so if you’re doing something else at the time.

          “He TRUSTED the professional”

          Do you just give gas when the light turns green?

          • Baguette@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 hour ago

            You should probably reread the articles if you still think it’s an actual necklace and not a weighted exercise tool.

            I’m not gonna continue with this since you think trusting a professional is equivalent to trusting a stoplight