And when people were eating fast food, no one thought they were going to get diabetes.
Or when people worked around chemicals they didn't know were toxic, no one thought they would get cancer, just like those who started smoking before the tobacco industry admitted the danger.
Or when someone went for a joyride with no helmet or skied down a slope a little more steep than expected, no one thought they would end up with debilitating head and back injuries.
When people worked too long at their jobs with no exercise and too much stress, no one thought they would have heart attacks and strokes.
When someone got pregnant without realizing they were not able to raise a child who ended up having psychological and social problems, no one thought of the expense of putting them in jail or paying for lifelong care.
Just about every major illness can trace back to choices made when no one had any idea of the consequences, or thought those consequences would ever happen to them.
If you start blaming the victims (with the implication that they don't deserve compassion) there aren't a whole lot of people left.