Duchess of Cambridge's nurse has reportedly been found dead

crazy, she must have had issues

do feel for those radio presenters. I found it funny tbh
 
Just heard this on the news, poor woman how tragic.

She must have been so embarrassed and couldn't live with it. I can imagine the subservient and selfless kind of woman she was and must have felt she had let everyone down. I see she was of a foreign background and honour and dishonouring yourself is often a much more serious business.

How horrible, poor soul...someone should have told her not to worry, not her fault, all this would have blown over.
 
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Just heard this on the news, poor woman how tragic.

She must have been so embarrassed and couldn't live with it. I can imagine the subservient and selfless kind of woman she was and must have felt she had let everyone down. I see she was of a foreign background and honour and dishonouring yourself is often a much more serious business.

How horrible, poor soul...someone should have told her not to worry, not her fault, all this would have blown over.

Like a fossil tree from which we gather no flowers
Sad has been my life
Fated no fruit to produce.
 
A disgusting invasion of privacy, a very cruel joke with life changing consequences, but not something you'd expect anyone to kills themselves over.

Tragic stuff.
 
Hmm - seems a tad extreme to top oneself over being a bit embarrassed. It's not like the womans job was at risk. I personally struggle to have sympathy for someone that commits suicide. It's ultimately a very selfish thing. Her poor children. And not to mention the DJs, they're going to have to live with having done something that you could in no way have predicted would end in a death.

What a properly messed up situation that was relatively harmless until she went over the edge. Are we supposed to vilify everyone involved because this one woman turned out to be a bit unstable? It's sad but empathising with someone that leaves their children behind isn't in my capacity.
 

How exactly is a nurse saying "yea, she's fine. She's been sleeping on and off but not throwing up" a disgusting invasion of privacy? People are reacting like the hospital plastered her medical records across the capital for all to see. They didn't, the nurse on the phone said she was fine and that was it.
 
How exactly is a nurse saying "yea, she's fine. She's been sleeping on and off but not throwing up" a disgusting invasion of privacy? People are reacting like the hospital plastered her medical records across the capital for all to see. They didn't, the nurse on the phone said she was fine and that was it.

The content of the information was irrelevant.
 
The content of the information was irrelevant.

Utter nonsense, of course the content is important. Phoning a hospital up and asking how someone is is not an invasion of privacy. Someone giving a total 'meh' answer is also not an invasion of privacy. This 'prank' is a total non story and it's a joke that it got so much air time.
 
The call didn't even make it through to the royals -as far as privacy invasions go, it's pretty low on the scale... it's not remotely close to having your norks published in a magazine. A little perspective goes a long way. The whole thing has been shockingly skewed because the middle man/woman decided that she couldn't deal with the embarrassment? Ridiculous.
 
That's not an accurate assessment of what happened.

Private information was obtained through intentional deception and dishonesty.

End.

Private information? "She is fine". It's hardly private information is it? It's basically what the rest of the world knew. These guys were just stupid enough to let their source be public.
 
Private information? "She is fine". It's hardly private information is it? It's basically what the rest of the world knew.

And what if she said 'she isn't fine' and nobody else knew about it?

Does that somehow make it worse?

Exaggerate much?

Private information was obtained through intentional deception and dishonesty.

Which component do you think is exaggeration?
 
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And what if she said 'she isn't fine' and nobody else knew about it?

Does that somehow make it worse?



Private information was obtained through intentional deception and dishonesty.

Which component do you think is exaggeration?

Do you think that if something was really wrong the the nurse would be disclosing that over the phone anyway?
 
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