answer:In the past, I’ve worked places where it was definitely more about getting the job done than it was about getting it done safely. OSHA, or at least the insurance companies, would’ve shit bricks if they’d have seen me and my buddy as roofers or when I was climbing free-hand around 30 foot industrial shelving looking for inventory to fill orders in a warehouse. Nowadays it’s as safe as my house, whatever that implies, unless I’m on site. With that, I’ve worked some pretty unusual/dangerous locations but in them safety has been a priority to the extent possible and site management was surprisingly responsive to safety concerns (though sometimes I suspect more to protect their investment/career than their people). Sometimes though, all you can do is warn people and hope they’ll think before they act. To paraphrase a conversation I had once: If you’re dumb enough to be wandering around the test range during live fire analysis, despite the signs, sirens, and cacophonous gunfire, there’s only so much to be done.