muckefuck: (Default)
[personal profile] muckefuck
I've read a lot of sad things in the wake of Blacksburg, among them [livejournal.com profile] that_dang_otter's bitter point that, on average, more Americans than died there are killed every day in the USA, but since they're not all killed in one place, they don't garner the same kind of attention. We can glimpse just how inured we've become to their deaths by the fact that the officials at VA Tech weren't willing to cancel classes for 20,000 on account of only two on-campus murders. It makes me wonder what their cut-off was: Four students? Ten? Would it be the same for faculty and/or staff? What's the quota where I work? And has it changed in light of Monday's events?

But I think the saddest thing I've read so far is this:
Kim Min-kyung, a South Korean student at Virginia Tech reached by telephone from Seoul, said there were about 500 Koreans at the school, including Korean-Americans. She said she had never met Cho. She said South Korean students feared retaliation and were gathering in groups.
I so dearly wish I could say they were just being paranoid, but I'm too well acquainted with human nature--and past reactions to massacres with minority perpetrators--to say that.
Date: 2007-04-18 05:04 pm (UTC)

From: [identity profile] richardthinks.livejournal.com
Nope, I'm with muckefuck here. While it may be that the average American (or any other national, for that matter) can distinguish between ideological crimes and individual meltdowns, there's still a small minority that can't and may well lash out (and, at the other end of the spectrum, a small minority that, when confronted by any such act, tries to understand first before reacting). I'd be nervous.

Profile

muckefuck: (Default)
muckefuck

January 2025

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
121314 15161718
192021 22232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 5th, 2025 06:42 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios