Arrow-right Camera
Subscribe now

You can’t always wait

You are in a car accident. You or a family member has a life-threatening arterial bleed. The victim has less than 60 seconds to live before they bleed out. An untrained Good Samaritan runs up to your car and offers to apply direct pressure to the wound to stop the bleeding. Do you accept, or do you say you’d rather wait for the highly trained paramedic who is 5-10 minutes away?

You or your kids are being attacked in a public place, school, mall, church, etc. You can wait for the highly trained professional who is many more minutes away, or rely on a well-trained armed citizen, or even an untrained armed individual who can at least try to stop the killing immediately.

If in either scenario you choose waiting, that guarantees death will occur. Fear of reliance on an untrained person who is there now, because they may not deliver the highest standard of care assures that no care will be rendered. Someone must take immediate action.

I spent 45 years in emergency services, and got there too late too many times. We rely on first-responder citizens to hold the line until we get there. I support training of all types, and do not look down my nose at the “amateur” citizen who makes a difference

Robert B. Smith

Post Falls



Letters policy

The Spokesman-Review invites original letters on local topics of public interest. Your letter must adhere to the following rules:

  • No more than 250 words
  • We reserve the right to reject letters that are not factually correct, racist or are written with malice.
  • We cannot accept more than one letter a month from the same writer.
  • With each letter, include your daytime phone number and street address.
  • The Spokesman-Review retains the nonexclusive right to archive and re-publish any material submitted for publication.

Unfortunately, we don’t have space to publish all letters received, nor are we able to acknowledge their receipt. (Learn more.)

Submit letters using any of the following:

Our online form
Submit your letter here
Mail
Letters to the Editor
The Spokesman-Review
999 W. Riverside Ave.
Spokane, WA 99201
Fax
(509) 459-3815

Read more about how we crafted our Letters to the Editor policy