Survival of the fittest. If you are too stupid to cross prematurely, and not look - even at 125mph you'd see it coming - then that can only be a good thing for the seriously deplenished gene pool.
But in the current culture, an organisation needs to take the flack...
I find that comment despicable in these circumstances frankly.

I listened to a programme dedicated to this tragedy on the radio today.Railtrack buried the reports their own inspectors had made regarding this station, which were written in 2000 and 2002.The reports stated that the setup was inherently unsafe, and was an accident waiting to happen.It was when, not if.
There was only one ticket office which was at the southbound side of the track,so people who needed to travel north had to cross to buy a ticket,then cross back again after they had done so.
Iirc the two young girls were travelling northbound (to Cambridge ?) on a shopping trip.after buying tickets, the lights etc. were flashing at the gates,their train had just come into the station and came to a stop.It seems they wrongly assumed that to be the reason the lights were warning not to cross and decided to cross back to get on the train. At that moment another train appeared from the opposite direction and hit them. I can only take bobs word for the visibilty,but how long would it take a southbound train travelling at high speed (over 100mph ?) from becoming visible from the gates,to actually being present at the gates ?
The train drivers had been banned from sounding their horns when approaching this station,as it was said to cause annoyance to local residents.
To me,the fact that railtrack hid their own safety reports from the coroner,family solicitors and all other interested parties speaks volumes. Once the reports were discovered,they had effectively hung themselves and rightly so.
I listened to the father of one of the girls being interviewed on the radio today,and tbh,it was just heartbreaking to listen to.