at speeds approaching five miles an hour. life is about managing risk. it's not about making safety the prime directive. it's about being safe as often as you can. but the safety first culture and with great respect, you know, a lot of the protocols you'll read in osha and a lot of other well-intended manuals that mandate very, very specific adhesion, these things over time create in my view a kind of complacency that's actually counterintuitive. so, when you're forced to sit through a compulsory meeting and when you're forced to do go through lock-out, tag-out routines and you're forced to do a lot of things under the guise that somebody else cares more about my safety than i do, then you abdicate a certain measure of responsibility. you become complacent and you get hurt. first four years of "dirty jobs"