Every single time, a failure is down to *multiple* factors: a series of failures that all manage to align when unforeseen circumstances make failure not just a possibility, but an inevitability. Factors include human negligence or ignorance, lack of training/education, under-designing, building with materials inadequate for the job (either from cutting costs or because they don't know yet that the materials aren't enough)...
Not every engineering failure ends in deaths, but plenty do; and even when there aren't deaths, there are often serious injuries, and of course the destruction of materials, structures, and building equipment (like cranes or tugboats or barges, etc.). Hence the saying about policy being written in blood: all too often, people have to die before something is made truly safe.
@MidnightRider LOLSOB yeah unfortunately, that happens way too often. They definitely had go fever for that one.
@MidnightRider Definitely. My heart aches for Allan McDonald, who tried so damn hard to delay the launch and couldn't.
@Impious_Jade Yeah I know a guy whose job it was to identify manufacturing product flaws in the imaging department, He found a bad one and the company got mad at him for finding it. Oh wait that was me.
@Impious_Jade Caved into public and political pressure instead of having the fortitude to say "the lives of the Astronauts are the first priority, we'll launch when it's safe".