Thoughts are with the poor lads friends and family. What ever happened, someone still lost their life, and that's tradgic
Thoughts are with the poor lads friends and family. What ever happened, someone still lost their life, and that's tradgic
that over the last few weeks a young soldier was killed on his bike by a car driver and now this young man. Young men going somewhere in life and making their way, taken out and killed through no fault of their own, yet we know little about them and there is little comment in the media.
Then a kid at an exclusive private school steals a bottle of Vodka, gets seriously fucked up and dies; and the media are full of what a tragedy it is and how Somebody Should Do Something. Completely self inflicted, and no less a tragedy for the people left behind, but how come when a rich kid drinks himself to death it's time to deal with teen alcohol abuse, yet when a couple of young men on bikes get killed by cars nobody bats an eyelid?
Don't blame me, I voted Green.
I agree that death on the road is common, but then so is death through alcohol abuse - possibly even more common. And how much handwringing would have gone on if the two young men on bikes had been women driving cars or doctors on bicycles? I think it comes down to motorcyclists being seen as more expendible than other people.
Don't blame me, I voted Green.
So can someone please explain to me why the youth Suicide rate in NZ is higher than the National Road Toll, and has been for around eight years. Yet it gets no funding and very little media exposure or public empathy...
Because youth suicide is, to be brutally honest, a little embarrassing. Admitting that we're failing so many young people when we live in such a brave new world does not win votes, and it takes a major ideological shift by the whole of our society to deal with, whereas road deaths are easy - more TV ads, more speed cameras and cops hiding behind trees filiming dodgy overtaking wins votes and costs bugger all.
Don't blame me, I voted Green.
It all comes down to newsworthiness. People die on the road every day - it doesn't have shock value.
One any day, the drunken behaviour of some rugby player will be more newsworthy than the hundreds of people who died in an earthquake in some third world country. Those earthquake victims will also be overshadowed by the latest gossip about Tiger Woods. A police dog being injured in the line of duty will rate higher than any road death.
The New Zealand road toll dictates that on average at least one person will die each day in a road accident. Whose turn it is today is simply part of the background of life - unfortunate, but inevitable.
Can I believe the magic of your size... (The Shirelles)
Which is interesting as if they (Politicians) stopped and though - shit if these young people were alive think of how much revenue we could take off them in Tax's, speeding fines etc... Hell god forbid any of them ever got their lives sorted out and progressed to become a Politician, Tax man or Constable, Doctor etc![]()
Lol my rant over.
I agree totaly, just proves my point on the view of the media today having a political agenda in order to atract ratings, the more people feed off the political interpretations (no longer do they just report the news to us so we can see what is happening over our fences.) they broadcast the more stories they have to follow! (perhaps they missed the political angle on this one...) this is issue as you mention seems to be all too frequently misrepresented as a sad tragety that was unavoidable, bollocks!
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks