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Dec. 28th, 2004 01:08 pm
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[personal profile] poliphilo
The tsunami puts our man-made disasters (Iraq for instance) into perspective. Politicians disappear from the news broadcasts. Nothing they have done or could do is half as fearsome as this. We see the same footage over and over again: big frothing waves chase holiday-makers through hotel gardens, people huddle in the shelter of a wall until the water sweeps them away, a train that the sea caught broadside lies wrecked in the jungle while a voice-over tells us that some its carriages have still to be found.

I don't like to watch. It makes me feel cheap in every sense of the word. This isn't stuff one should be viewing from one's reclining armchair with a mince-pie in one's fist.

They interviewed a man who was in a fifth floor room when the sea hit his hotel. He said he didn't see how anyone on the beach could have survived. "Afterwards," he added, "we went downstairs and took pictures."

Would I have taken pictures? I hope not.

Date: 2004-12-29 01:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
There is a ritual that has to be gone through. It involves people being asked the stupidest of questions. No real information is elicited. Shocked eyewitnesses say exactly what they are supposed to say on these occasions. The schedules get filled with vapid and intrusive nonsense because it's what everyone expects. Big stories get big coverage even though there's so little to be said that reporters and newscasters have to keep on saying the same thing over and over again.

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