Originally Posted By: benjammin

What really peeves me is how our media is reacting to this event, like it is such a greater calamity than what is happening to people elsewhere. The location of the event ought not make any difference. Just shows how truly out of touch we are with the reality of present day events.


I agree. Sadly, to the media this is little more than a ratings bonanza. Do we really need a thousand talking bubbleheads giving us their interpretaion of the incident on 100 different channels when they all say the same thing? Here's an interesting take on the reactions and media coverage by mid-east specialist Juan Cole.

Quote:

I keep hearing from US politicians and the US mass media that the "situation is improving" in Iraq. The profound sorrow and alarm produced in the American public by the horrific shootings at Virginia Tech should give us a baseline for what the Iraqis are actually living through. They have two Virginia Tech-style attacks every single day. Virginia Tech will be gone from the headlines and the air waves by next week this time in the US, though the families of the victims will grieve for a lifetime. But next Tuesday I will come out here and report to you that 64 Iraqis have been killed in political violence. And those will mainly be the ones killed by bombs and mortars. They are only 13% of the total; most Iraqis killed violently, perhaps 500 a day throughout the country if you count criminal and tribal violence, are just shot down. Shot down, like the college students and professors at Blacksburg. We Americans can so easily, with a shudder, imagine the college student trying to barricade himself behind a door against the armed madman without. But can we put ourselves in the place of Iraqi students?


http://www.juancole.com/