From: Rebekah > esterday, I drove by the site of the Charleston Sofa Super Store > fire, which you can read up on here: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charleston_Sofa_Super_Store_fire > > My husband and I lost two friends in that fire, and it was a shock to > see it still standing. I never drove over there because I didn't want > to see it, and I figured it would have been torn down by now. For > some reason, it's still standing, and I've decided I'd like to shoot > some pictures of this in black and white, but I'm unsure of the > legality and political correctness of doing so. In order to be on the > right side of the law and not offend the families of the men who > perished, who or which government whatnot should I ask for permission? > None of them. This is the USA, not Soviet Russia or Red China.
> And, if you had the opportunity to shoot this or something like it, > would you? Maybe, maybe not ... depends on whether it had a story I wanted to tell. Just because someone died there wouldn't keep me from taking the picture, nor would that be reason enough by itself to make me want to take one. -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net