Me? A wiseass?rEvolutionist wrote: A wiseass, eh? There's the door, champ.
Pretty sure you're spot-on. Don't worry, you'll live.

Me? A wiseass?rEvolutionist wrote: A wiseass, eh? There's the door, champ.
JimC wrote:What we can do is come down hard on the fundamentalist mosques where firebrands preach jihad from the pulpit...
Going on the wagon has not sharpened your analytical skills on iota. There were no journalists on the spot when the Paris massacre occurred. It's all retrospective reporting. Same as in Africa. There are journalists reporting from all over that continent, including north-eastern Nigeria and Baga itself. Problem is, reports of 2000 murdered blacks don't attract the readership that the murder of 12 whites do, so the former get reported on page nine for a day or two while the latter gets wall to wall coverage for a week or more. And the editors are proven right. The readers care a lot more about the massacre of 12 Caucasians than 2000 Blacks in one single operation by religious extremists. Seen any "Je suis Baga" placards or avatars yet?Scumple wrote:No journalists, black or white, is the deciding factor concerning coverage. No easy lines of communication in the wilds of Africa given there are bands of armed men massacring folks rather than a regular police force on duty. Can you blame journalists for going to the oil areas where they are safely embedded and protected by coalition forces whilst getting footage of the best explosions for war-porn newz?Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I know. I was thinking exactly the same thing earlier. No oil in that part of Nigeria either. So no airstrikes for them.Hermit wrote:Ayup, XC. Perspective.
The reaction to the deaths of twelve French citizens is amazing, both in the press and by individuals. Meanwhile, the population of an entire township is massacred by religious fanatics somewhere somewhere in Africa. At least 2000 humans dead. A few articles appear, but nobody puts up "Je suis Baga" posters or avatars. Baga? Who is that? Oh. A town. Thanks for the info. No Caucasians there, though, so, :shrug: .
Correct. The massacre of a dozen Caucasians is less relevant than that of 2000 Blacks. In other words, we don't care so much about tragedies themselves. That's what gives me the shits.rEvolutionist wrote:It's a simple case of how relevant an event is to you.
Hermit wrote:Correct. The massacre of a dozen Caucasians is less relevant than that of 2000 Blacks. In other words, we don't care so much about tragedies themselves. That's what gives me the shits.rEvolutionist wrote:It's a simple case of how relevant an event is to you.
And fuck Charlie Hebdo. That rag is not a satirical, no punches pulled, no prisoners taken equal opportunity offender, as one journalist put it in The Times. That's bullshit. The then editor of Charlie Hebdo, Philippe Val, told one of its writers, Maurice Sinet, to apologise or get fired after he had been charged with inciting racial hatred because he had written a barbed remark about president Sarkozy's son's engagement to a Jewish heiress. Sinet replied that he'd rather get his balls cut off than apologise. Val fired him. Linkypoo So much for being an equal opportunity, no punches pulled offender the publication is being lionised as in the press.
I think nobody deserves being executed for making jokes that offend some, but please, let's not lionise and idealise a satirical rag.
If Charlie Hebdo wants to live up to its reputation as a no-holds-barred satirical paper, it could do worse than to publish an article next week, describing in detail how the massacre was an inside job perpetrated to ramp up circulation, that the clever hoax worked better than expected and that its owners are now laughing all the way to the bank.
Like this, you mean?JimC wrote:What we can do is come down hard on the fundamentalist mosques where firebrands preach jihad from the pulpit...
What exactly was your point in posting this, Seraph? That there have been worse atrocities that the Charlie Hebdo killings is a no brainer. Look at the Oklahoma bombing. Or World War II.Hermit wrote:Ayup, XC. Perspective.
The reaction to the deaths of twelve French citizens is amazing, both in the press and by individuals. Meanwhile, the population of an entire township is massacred by religious fanatics somewhere somewhere in Africa. At least 2000 humans dead. A few articles appear, but nobody puts up "Je suis Baga" posters or avatars. Baga? Who is that? Oh. A town. Thanks for the info. No Caucasians there, though, so, :shrug: .
OK. Let's scratch 13 words from my post. That deletes the religious aspect for the sake of the argument.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:What exactly was your point in posting this, Seraph? That there have been worse atrocities that the Charlie Hebdo killings is a no brainer. Look at the Oklahoma bombing. Or World War II.Hermit wrote:Ayup, XC. Perspective.
The reaction to the deaths of twelve French citizens is amazing, both in the press and by individuals. Meanwhile, the population of an entire township is massacred by religious fanatics somewhere somewhere in Africa. At least 2000 humans dead. A few articles appear, but nobody puts up "Je suis Baga" posters or avatars. Baga? Who is that? Oh. A town. Thanks for the info. No Caucasians there, though, so, :shrug: .![]()
It is not the numbers killed that matters here. What makes Charlie Hebdo different is that it was a monstrous over-reaction to a joke. It was an attack on free-speech and the right to offend. It was a small group that decided that they were completely justified in killing people that drew pictures of paedo-Mo. And it was designed to gain the maximum publicity possible and to make others too scared to draw cartoons themselves. That is why there is a #jesuischarlie campaign and not a #jesuisbaga one.
The Baga massacre was very different. It wasn't a terrorist attack of the same ilk. In fact, it wasn't a terrorist attack at all! Just like the similar massacres by ISIS, it was a territorial attack by a land-grabbing gang of revolutionaries and warlords. Despite their (allegedly) religious motivation, you are NOT comparing like with like here!
So I stand by my point. Terrorist attacks are incredibly rare. Sadly, religiously inspired civil strife in failed states is not - but it is not the same thing.
The parts you have removed do not address my point. There was nothing factually wrong in what you wrote. They were religious fanatics. What they were not, was terrorists. The reaction was, accordingly, very different.Hermit wrote:OK. Let's scratch 13 words from my post.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:What exactly was your point in posting this, Seraph? That there have been worse atrocities that the Charlie Hebdo killings is a no brainer. Look at the Oklahoma bombing. Or World War II.Hermit wrote:Ayup, XC. Perspective.
The reaction to the deaths of twelve French citizens is amazing, both in the press and by individuals. Meanwhile, the population of an entire township is massacred by religious fanatics somewhere somewhere in Africa. At least 2000 humans dead. A few articles appear, but nobody puts up "Je suis Baga" posters or avatars. Baga? Who is that? Oh. A town. Thanks for the info. No Caucasians there, though, so, :shrug: .![]()
It is not the numbers killed that matters here. What makes Charlie Hebdo different is that it was a monstrous over-reaction to a joke. It was an attack on free-speech and the right to offend. It was a small group that decided that they were completely justified in killing people that drew pictures of paedo-Mo. And it was designed to gain the maximum publicity possible and to make others too scared to draw cartoons themselves. That is why there is a #jesuischarlie campaign and not a #jesuisbaga one.
The Baga massacre was very different. It wasn't a terrorist attack of the same ilk. In fact, it wasn't a terrorist attack at all! Just like the similar massacres by ISIS, it was a territorial attack by a land-grabbing gang of revolutionaries and warlords. Despite their (allegedly) religious motivation, you are NOT comparing like with like here!
So I stand by my point. Terrorist attacks are incredibly rare. Sadly, religiously inspired civil strife in failed states is not - but it is not the same thing.
There. Done.
The rest stands as is.
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 10 guests