Public outrage at this atrocity appears to be extremely thin on the ground for whatever reason. Very strange.
Public outrage at this atrocity appears to be extremely thin on the ground for whatever reason. Very strange.
I think it's more a case of how we measure public outrage. Apart from a few resident nutters in the UK, everyone would be upset about it. I guess the realisation would be that there is little we can do about it, being that it happened in another country.
Precisely. Wailing chest beating public displays of 'national' mourning belong to tin pot dictatorships. And, er, happens quite a bit in Arab countries must admit. Still, doesn't mean we Brits aren't horrified and outraged and talking about this. I think there's more a stoic recognition this will continue for all of our lives and no easy solution. Unless you're an armchair general when it's easy to volunteer other people's lives as the Daily Mail did when they said to send in the SAS to defeat ISIS. Yeah, cause that'll work...if it was in a film.
On a separate matter I see a family from Luton has gone awol in Syria.Willing to bet it's the fault of the police or security services?
David Cameron has been very quite over the outrage , seems to be more concerned with not offending muslims than hitting back against ISIS
The point I was making is that if you feel like the way you describe, you should already have spent some time thinking about what happened and to whom. You don't have to do it in some orchestrated fashion. My view is that grief and reflection should be on a personal scale, not a public display. That said, if people want to then I'm not stopping them.
Russell Brand describes the minute's silence as 'bullshit', 'hollow, futile gesture' and that the attacks are our fault...of course.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIRm81u2jNk
My goodness, his videos are a masterclass in narcissism and proof that a little knowledge is dangerous.
All this from a man who only recently described ISIS as an organisation 'borne from love' in his bestselling book. He's rapidly getting to the point where he irritates me as much as Martin McGuinness. That's some accomplishment, let me tell you.
Absolutely. Ever since Princess Diana died, there has been a tendency towards,what I call, 'public displays of grief'.No longer is it enough to feel sadness or grief, but you must be seen to display those feelings in a public manner.
Very American .
Russell Brand describes the minute's silence as 'bullshit', 'hollow, futile gesture' and that the attacks are our fault...of course.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIRm81u2jNk
My goodness, his videos are a masterclass in narcissism and proof that a little knowledge is dangerous.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...-confronted-by-friend-of-Tunisia-victims.html
All this from a man who only recently described ISIS as an organisation 'borne from love' in his bestselling book. He's rapidly getting to the point where he irritates me as much as Martin McGuinness. That's some accomplishment, let me tell you.