Die bezaubernde zweijährige Tochter einer Influencerin kommt bei einem schrecklichen Unfall im Haus der Familie Georgia ums Leben

    https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15926191/jamal-morton-daughter-rose-drowns-georgia-pool.html

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    16 Kommentare

    1. Jamal Morton, known online as J’Amore or Mr Jay, revealed his daughter Rose died at his home in the Atlanta suburb of Hoschton, Georgia, on Monday after she ‚thought she was a big girl and could swim all by herself.‘

    2. Secret_Cow_5053 on

      GREAT JOB, PARENTING INFLUENCER 😒

      Here’s my attempt to influence you: stop procreating.

    3. Dependent_Star3998 on

      „Management is keeping his platforms running while he and his family take time to grieve the heartbreaking loss of their baby girl“.

      Maybe he should have hired someone to keep an eye on his daughter instead of hiring someone to keep an eye on his social media accounts.

    4. penilesensorydevice on

      Oh man, kids and pools are a recipe for disaster. Every story like this is always the same. One moment of inattention, and tragedy.

    5. Pale_Row1166 on

      Who is paying these influencers to let their kids drown in the pool? We do not like this content. Sponsors: no more influencers letting their kids drown in the pool content, it’s a bummer.

    6. He has enough to pay a management company but not his daughter’s funeral. Also the way he described it doesn’t sit right with me. “She thought she was a big girl who could swim all by herself”. Well did they think she was a big girl who didn’t need supervision? Putting the blame on her is shitty. I typically have a lot more empathy for parents who lose children but his reaction sounds gross.

    7. physicalstheillusion on

      I knew what this was going to be about the second I saw that unfenced pool. People get way too complacent with pools and other bodies of water and think it could never happen to them. It only takes seconds to lose a child to drowning. One bathroom trip, one distracted moment cooking dinner, one answered phone call or text. There’s a reason this is a leading cause of death, but it’s 100% preventable.

      If you have a mobile child and any size body of water on your property, you need to stop everything you’re doing and install non-climbable fences, door alarms and latches, and security cameras with motion sensor alarms. And teach your kids/babies how to float and survive in water (ie how to get themselves out) as a last resort layer of safety to top it all off.

      Even a 5 gallon bucket of water or a shallow tub indoors can be fatal, so keep containers empty unless you’re there with them.

    8. I can’t even imagine how much this must hurt the family left behind, and it’s all in the public eye where everyone can talk smack about him and his choices.

    9. ilanallama85 on

      You can’t have small children and a swimming pool. I’m sorry, you just can’t, it *isn’t safe.* That’s a hill I’ll die on.

    10. chipsandsalsa3 on

      I am a pool owner and a parent. The first thing we did was enroll our 10 month old in rescue swim lessons. He ihas a healthy fear of the water but can swim like a fish now at the age of five. It was hard to watch him in those lessons, but it beats the alternative!

    11. Status-Visit-918 on

      We grew up around water and I always find it so crazy that people aren’t neurotic like our family is about it

      I don’t allow my newly 18 year old to kayak alone, he wears a life vest, and on boats, we all wear them, any age. I don’t stay watching him take a quick dip in my dad’s pool anymore but if he or anyone is out in the pool, I at least monitor through the glass door. At all ages, we still tell someone if we’re getting in the pool. And any pool, or the water my father lives on, there is an 8 foot fence around it, with a combination lock. If we go to the beach, someone’s job is to watch anyone in the ocean, it’s so normal, that it’s really unspoken or we’ll say “you gonna be up? I’m trying to lay down” to figure out which one of us is going to just watch, but again, at 18, I still watch my kid in there.

      I get that some people think that may all be neurotic but anyone can drown, and I’d rather be extra safe than even a little bit sorry.

    12. HenryInRoom302 on

      That’s tragic but dude, an unfenced pool? Your entire job as a parent is to keep your kids safe and healthy. A responsible parent would have had a fence around that pool before the kid was even born.

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