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shafique wrote:The main news item this morning on BBC world was the candle light vigil and memorial service for the victims of the shootings, with clips of President Bush giving his condolences.
A thought occurred to me this morning - the killing of 33 civilians in one incident can be so high profile that it would be the main news items for two days running...
If only the killings of other innocents (and far younger children) around the world had the same effect.
It reminded me of a line in an episode of The West Wing a few years ago:
President Bartlett:"Why is a Kuhndunese [African] life worth less to me than an American life?"
Will Bailey: "I don't know, Sir, but it is."
#414 "Inauguration Part I"
Broadcast: February 5, 2003
Cheers,
Shafique
freza wrote:I find American-style candle light vigils slightly disturbing....
what the hell?? Where's Satan Redeemer or even MAC to make sense of what ascy is trying to say?asc_26 wrote:I would like to view it - candle lighting - as a form of light of rationality; seeking justice for humanity and rejects pseudoscience. But before lighting those candles, let's hope paraffin tests were conducted. And who am i to tell them?
freza wrote:I find American-style candle light vigils slightly disturbing....
freza wrote:what the hell?? Where's Satan Redeemer or even MAC to make sense of what ascy is trying to say?asc_26 wrote:I would like to view it - candle lighting - as a form of light of rationality; seeking justice for humanity and rejects pseudoscience. But before lighting those candles, let's hope paraffin tests were conducted. And who am i to tell them?
Candle light vigils are better left to saint worshippers....otherwise they look phony, that whole "we need to start healing" thing is just so weird.
scot1870 wrote:freza wrote:I find American-style candle light vigils slightly disturbing....
Holy crap freza, we agree on something!
The American candlelight vigil always seems to be based on the fact that Americans want to seen to be part of paying respects to someone, and when the TV cameras turn up the number of candles grows exponentially. My main memory of this guff is the death of Kurt Cobain, as a huge music fan it affected me immensely but America seemed to think that lighting a candle for a man who'd degenerated so much to blow his own brains out was by far the best and most public choice rather than address the underlying elements which had led him to do so. When Courtney Love (his wife) publicly called him an "a--hole" for his actions, it only lit more candles, not caused more people to question whether they were part of the problem.
The UK wasn't immune, the disgrace that was the death of Diana will haunt our national reputation forever.
On the topic of gun control, the f**kwit american vote has too much sway to ever ban guns. It's actually quite frightening to hear your average Texan and the like go on about their "God-given right to bear arms". Shoot anyone who applies for a gun license and the world will be a safer place
Have we really cracked you asc? I think not, I think you're uncrackable to be honest. You could use a little cracking up though.asc_26 wrote:Hahaha..... This thread makes me laugh.... thanks. ((((((Freza)))))) You all crack me... MAC
jabbajabba wrote:C'mon folks - 32 people have been shot to death and you are all taking an exception to the fact that they have held a candle vigil.
Critic on how people handle grief in the light of how the media operates is quite a sweeping generalization on the individual.
Chocoholic wrote:Also it amazes me that no-one has said anything thing about how this could have been avoided.
Cho, from South Korea originally, had been taken out of college two years previously, due to mental health issues. He was in councelling and being given phsychiatric treatment. For some bizarre reason all his treatments and sessions stopped and he was allowed back to the college.
So was his crazed (or not so, seeing how well thought out his actions were, so much that he even to time out from shooting to mail a video to a news station from a local post office, before he continue slaughtering his fellow students) the result of a failure in the health system to carry on treating a disturbed and potentially dangerous young man? Failure of the tech who allowed him back? Failure of his parents?
There's many more issues here.
panaghoy wrote:i prefer to live in gun-less community…
i hope you don’t sell gun… the way I look at it, profits will go up big time for sellers and gun manufacturers once people start buying guns!
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