Oh carry on then.
Also, it's okay to be a massive hypocrite. #palestine
#fuckpalestine
I'm still baffled none of them considered staying at the entrance until the rain passed. "Hey, the entrance of the cave is flooding ... let's go deeper in."
Surely they were already deeper in when it started flooding.
Five hours to get out?
They're fucked, there's no chance they can dive themselves.
At least they'll have the current with them...
Well I reckon they will get them out.
Lewis and #TeamEngineer to invent some kind of extraction chamber.
I'm not sure how broadband is going to help.
It would be nice if they got out.
I just don't see the point in actively worrying about the situation. Experience it passively.
Google ‘Empathy’.
July 6, 2018
Three children have been killed and seven others wounded when two roadside mines exploded in residential areas in Afghanistan’s southern Ghazni Province.
Arif Noori, spokesman for the governor of Ghazi, said on July 6 that the two separate incidents occurred on the same day in the remote Gilan district.
Children were playing when an explosive device went off, killing three and wounding four children around midday in Gilan’s Shinkai area, district chief Mohammad Karim Gilanwal said.
https://www.rferl.org/a/roadside-min.../29347620.html
If you're going to give a shit about people across the world in peril let alone dying every single day, you're just going to wear yourself out emotionally.
If you're being selective about it, i.e. only caring about news stories that have sensational or exceptional qualities to them as opposed to incidents that seem common place (e.g. mines killing kids in Afghanistan, school shootings in the USA, sex trafficking in Thailand), then you're inconsistent and purposefully ignorant.
You can understand that a situation is sad. You don't need to actively feel sad to acknowledge it.
Save your emotional energy for people and situations where you can actually make a difference be it through direct participation (e.g. taking care of your family, volunteering somewhere) or advocating to change something that's a systemic issue.
Yeah. It's a novelty. If this were a common occurrence, none of us would have even heard the story on international news.Originally Posted by Pepe;
And to segue, this is an interesting story that will likely have a sad ending, but it doesn't call for strangers to be sad. It's something you should treat as abstract/distant so that you can reserve your energy for something concrete/near (like your own family and then community).
I think you're probably putting too much emphasis on the "being sad" part. Let's use a different term, shall we? I feel bad for those kids for as long as this situation will drag on. It's not costing me much emotionally. You went the exact opposite way though by saying "forget about them". That's what I took issue with.
Of course it doesn't surprise me.
But it also doesn't mean that the lives of the Thai kids are more important.
It just means that media warp people's sphere of care, which I find distasteful when there are tragedies all over the world that deserve recognition but get none because they aren't sensational or intriguing.
So instead of having a bleeding heart for every tragedy across the world because my sphere of care knows no bounds, I'd rather actively care about people on a local or regional level where their lives can actually resonate in a knowable manner within my community. For example, the Humboldt, Canada bus crash that killed sixteen young hockey players is within my sphere of care. This means that I'd rather not care about a group of Thai kids (which gets harder the more you hear about the story due to how empathy works) because there's effectively no connectivity from their lives and community to my life and my community.
It’s possible to care without being wounded as if you knew them, you know? You can also care about lots and lots of things, to different extents. It’s really pretty easy for a functioning human being. If you’re not empathising towards a school shooting because it’s ‘commonplace’ then I don’t really know what to tell you.
I posted in the work WhatsApp that being stuck in a flooded cave in Thailand would have been l preferable to being at work yesterday. Two laughed, one did the rolleyes emoji and the other 9 probably seethed in the “Workmates (no Baz)” group.
I’m honestly disappointed it’s such big news. Sir Harry will be dedicating his golden boot to them next.
I'm a twit
Let's be honest, if this hadn't happened, news outlets would still be going on about the weather.
Bad Panda.
My recommendation. Same principles apply in the water with the currentnt.
All these engineers and it’s Sincere that comes up with the solution. Overpaid mongs.
Good job it's not Barry Bennell with them lol.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-44755452
They’re trying to get them out. I just don’t see how this can work.
Two of them are out.
That's actually awesome.
Unbelievable.
Stop caring ffs.
If they manage to get them all out it’ll be a properly good effort.
Up to 6 now apparently.
#pray4panda.
So what was all the fuss about?
I think they just went for it because if they didn't do it today the rain would have made it impossible/
Two British blokes calling the shots as well. They deserve some sort of honour when they get back, and possibly even the same weekly wage as Raheem Sterling.
What about the bloke that took them in there? I don't fancy his chances if he makes it out, he'd be better off staying behind.
He’s getting praised more than anything from what I can see.
Footballers deserve their wage smh
They kick a bag of air around. When you think about what nurses get it's a joke.