Quote: (04-18-2013 09:01 AM)NY Digital Wrote:
funny how if it's a "natural disaster" it's not really important for news or outrage.
Relatively speaking it is slightly less sensational than malevolent violence. Yes. There are many differences-- no guilty perpetrators to be found, no motives to be saught, no adorable little boy brutally murdered in a cowardly act. In short, there is no injustice, no threat, only tragedy.
But the Texas explosion would be huge news if the Marathon bombing hadn't happened first. If an average mundane new story carries a value of 50, the fertilizer plant disaster would be a 1,000; ahead of or on par with tornados, major earthquakes, and other natural disasters. But the Boston Marathon bombing rates over 9,000 because of the element of human conflict and injustice.
You could make an argument that people shouldn't care about a terrorist, or his motives. That if we just pretended it never happened that it would deter future terrorists. But ultimately I don't think it makes much difference. The "Boston solidarity," the hunt for the perpetrators, and that sort of media attention means a lot to the people of the city and future marathon runners, and so long as the politicians don't spin it into oppressive new security laws then the reaction is not excessive.
The victims of the fertilizer explosion in West, Texas certainly deserve sympathy and support (monetary, emotional, blood donations). But because there was no malicious attack, no malevolent threat, the psychological injury is not the same.