
What kind of person sees someone in distress in this way and stands there filming and not rendering help. What has happened to our society.
— Dennis- Heres Your Sign. (@ric90521) February 1, 2025
Of course while many were calling out the bystander for not helping, there were some who questioned what he was supposed to do. But it seems like the least he could do is put the damn camera down and not record this guy who's clearly suffering one of the most traumatic experiences of his life. I haven't been able to find an update on the man or his condition yet, but can you imagine being his family (or the man himself) and opening up social media to see everybody talking about a video of your loved one on fire while somebody stood by and filmed it? There may not have been anything that bystanders could have done to help, but at least have the decency not to blast it all over social media for clicks and engagement. A witness on the scene who was later interviewed by the local news in Philadelphia even had strong words for those whose first instinct was to record as opposed to jumping in to help in whatever way they could: "I was absolutely scared, but I'm like, 'I need to find someone I can help.' Because I cannot stand by and watch people just record. I can't do that. I don't record, I help. I don't care about social media. I help, so that I can save lives." The man revealed that he gave the shirt off of his back to help a young child who suffered a head laceration when a piece of debris went through a car window. https://twitter.com/CoconnellFox29/status/1885673541258936640 And that's what you should do in an emergency. Not try to get it on video for social media.What kind of person sees someone in distress in this way and stands there filming and not rendering help. What has happened to our society.
— Dennis- Heres Your Sign. (@ric90521) February 1, 2025