"Some" Russians is not the same thing as ISIS attacks that have targeted both western and Muslim nations that have bred a growing distrust of Muslims in the former.If some Russians blew up a school of other Russians, you also wouldn't see the same solidarity as you do with Orlando, Paris, etc. It's not just race, religion, that separates us, it's culture.
In this age of satellites and worldwide travel I really question if this continues to be true. The world has become astoundingly small to us. Think it has more to do with people who look like our majority. That is, white people sympathizing more with other white people.
It's not race, it's culture and shared history. There's a strong link between the US and western Europe, but it's far weaker between the US and the rest of the world. That's why a terrorist attack in Paris hits harder than one in Moscow, Buenos Aires or Addis Ababa.
Yet Muslims around the world are expected to care if something happens in the West. Or else they are supporters or as some would prefer to call them passive terrorists.
A few reasons:
1. I care more about a fire in my kitchen, or my neighbor's kitchen, than a fire in the kitchen of someone three blocks away who I don't know.
2. I care about a fire when it happens unexpectedly, in a place fires usually do not happen. But if that neighbor a few blocks down keeps having fires, eventually I start to care less and less than I already do.
Its really not complicated to understand why the West doesn't pay much attention to bombings in the middle eats. Theres always bombings in the middle east. Eventually you just become desensitized.
"But where are the Muslims condemning these attacks?"
Hey now, there was a hashtag.
A hashtag isn't news and that particular hashtag was created in response to the story not being covered by mainstream news outlets.Wasn't that all over the news and Michelle Obama held up a hashtag?
A few reasons:
1. I care more about a fire in my kitchen, or my neighbor's kitchen, than a fire in the kitchen of someone three blocks away who I don't know.
2. I care about a fire when it happens unexpectedly, in a place fires usually do not happen. But if that neighbor a few blocks down keeps having fires, eventually I start to care less and less than I already do.
Its really not complicated to understand why the West doesn't pay much attention to bombings in the middle eats. Theres always bombings in the middle east. Eventually you just become desensitized.
There's a whole fucking bunch of assumptions you're making.I mean, the Muslim world widely regards the western world as a culture of sin and vice and this is a contributing factor behind every attack in the west on some level.
Every time there is an attack by ISIS in the middle east I know that in the back of everyone's mind is some relief that it did not happen here.
When attacks occur in the west, we know that the victims are people who have similar values as us. Namely, people that value cultural inclusivity...
When it occurs in the middle east, we know fuck all about the the people that are affected or its current cultural climate. For all we know it's affecting people who view women as trash, see homosexuality or christianity as a crime punishable by death, and find it permissible to beat your wife for reasons we find trivial. We just don't fucking know, and we can't fucking relate.
I mean, the Muslim world widely regards the western world as a culture of sin and vice amd is a contributing factor behind every attack in the west on some level.
When it occurs in the middle east, we know fuck all about the the people that are affected or the cultural climate. For all we know it's affecting people who view women as trash, homosexuality or christianity as a crime punishable by death, and see it as permissible to beat your wife. We just don't fucking know, and we can't fucking relate
This is ludicrous, most of these attacks occur in politically socially, economically unstable countries, terror attacks of that scale are far more prominent in these nations than they are in the west, to put it bluntly it's not news. You may as well ask why #Blacklivesmatter and the media in general turns a blind eye to black on black crime that has plagued African American communities for the better part of 5 decades, and is far more prominent than a kid being shot by a police officer, the latter is news the former is not.
Your reason 1 fails because we in the US don't generally give a rat's ass about what happens to people in Mexico. And they're more our neighbors than the UK.
That's easy to solve - get to know your neighbor from three blocks away. You don't even have to pay them a visit - there are various channels of remote communication nowadays.A few reasons:
1. I care more about a fire in my kitchen, or my neighbor's kitchen, than a fire in the kitchen of someone three blocks away who I don't know.
2. I care about a fire when it happens unexpectedly, in a place fires usually do not happen. But if that neighbor a few blocks down keeps having fires, eventually I start to care less and less than I already do.
Its really not complicated to understand why the West doesn't pay much attention to bombings in the middle eats. Theres always bombings in the middle east. Eventually you just become desensitized.
People expect those things to happen in the Middle East.
Couldnt the same be said the other way round as well? Where was the outcry of support and condemnation from Muslim groups and countries when the attacks on Brussels, Paris, and Charlie Hebdo happened?
Again with this fucking shit...Couldnt the same be said the other way round as well? Where was the outcry of support and condemnation from Muslim groups and countries when the attacks on Brussels, Paris, and Charlie Hebdo happened?
I disagree. I think most Americans would feel more at home in London or even Paris than Mexico City. Western European countries are more our "neighbors" in that poster's analogy than Mexico. It means "people that I think are like me" more than "people who live close."
Selective outrage.
Couldnt the same be said the other way round as well? Where was the outcry of support and condemnation from Muslim groups and countries when the attacks on Brussels, Paris, and Charlie Hebdo happened?
Couldnt the same be said the other way round as well? Where was the outcry of support and condemnation from Muslim groups and countries when the attacks on Brussels, Paris, and Charlie Hebdo happened?
We are not west now?It has always been like that imo. When something happens in a western country it gets more coverage in western media than when something happens in africa, south america, asia, ... And pretty sure it's the other way around also. And that's no so very strange tbh.
Doesn't mean I personally don't care, because I do, a great deal.
Poster I responded to said they care more about their neighbor than a person three blocks away. Which ignores that maybe I feel more at home in a person I know three blocks away than my neighbor. So no, your interpretation does not follow their analogy. Plus they were using a physical proximity argument, which would have been silly to use as a metaphor for cultural similarities.
Alright, I read the thread so far and almost none of you have read the article. Especially those of you outraged by it.
Read it and come back.
Probably for the same reason you don't hear much when 30 people die in Chicago over the weekend due to gang related activities, you just come to expect it.
People expect those things to happen in the Middle East.
Your reason 1 fails because we in the US don't generally give a rat's ass about what happens to people in Mexico. And they're more our neighbors than the UK.
The past couple of decades all we've heard is how terrorism against the West is a product of Western foreign policy, support for Israel, the presence of US troops in Muslim countries etc. Any sympathy for Western victims was quickly followed up by a subtle victim blaming. I've seen it even on this forum. Now the shoe is on the other foot I'm not sure why anyone expects any solidarity. You sympathise with your allies, your friends, not the people who blame you or despise you.
It has always been like that imo. When something happens in a western country it gets more coverage in western media than when something happens in africa, south america, asia, ... And pretty sure it's the other way around also. And that's no so very strange tbh.
Doesn't mean I personally don't care, because I do, a great deal.
Nope.And pretty sure it's the other way around also
Because it is further away from us. Same reason we don't really care that much about what happens to people in China, Indonesia or Russia. We don't feel connected to them like we do with France or the US for example.
It's really not that strange and happens with everything.
I disagree. I think most Americans would feel more at home in London or even Paris than Mexico City. Western European countries are more our "neighbors" in that poster's analogy than Mexico. It means "people that I think are like me" more than "people who live close."