swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,785
I do my best. Of course, I'm almost never on social media which is the greatest human manipulation device man ever invented.

So I'm left to roll my eyes and think WTF when Jimmy Kimmel is balling his eyes out on TV over Cecil the Lion and I'm thinking about all the murdered people in Zimbabwe.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,785
What's Facebook?

You mean that corporate surveillance system where the founding CEO called the students submitting personal info to it "Dumb fucks"? ;)
 

Red

-------
Moderator
Nov 26, 2006
47,024
I do my best. Of course, I'm almost never on social media which is the greatest human manipulation device man ever invented.

So I'm left to roll my eyes and think WTF when Jimmy Kimmel is balling his eyes out on TV over Cecil the Lion and I'm thinking about all the murdered people in Zimbabwe.
Is it just that people aren't well enough informed?

If you pay some attention to current events in general you are going to have a decent idea of what bad things are happening, so a picture only serves as confirmation of what you knew/assumed was going on.

Or are people genuinely surprised when it turns out bad things are happening - to active participants and innocent bystanders - in conflicts?

Are people really not thinking of what is happening when they see footage of a bomb being dropped and the subsequent explosion unless they are shown a picure of the result, with charred human remains and an assortment of scattered body parts?
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,785
Is it just that people aren't well enough informed?

If you pay some attention to current events in general you are going to have a decent idea of what bad things are happening, so a picture only serves as confirmation of what you knew/assumed was going on.

Or are people genuinely surprised when it turns out bad things are happening - to active participants and innocent bystanders - in conflicts?

Are people really not thinking of what is happening when they see footage of a bomb being dropped and the subsequent explosion unless they are shown a picure of the result, with charred human remains and an assortment of scattered body parts?
People know. They absolutely know. But until it becomes personal, it's just part of the endless drumbeat of an ever-growing body count.

A photo can make it personal. It can make you identify more closely with a friend or family member and elicit tremendous empathy where the parade of news headlines seems both remote and desensitizing.
 

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