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Showing Original Post only (View all)The World Rallied to Find Missing Titan Sub but Ignored Shipwrecked Migrants [View all]
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-world-rallied-to-find-missing-titan-sub-but-ignored-shipwrecked-migrants/Global media have been obsessed with the search for the missing submersible Titan, four of whose five occupants spent $250,000 each to get close to the famous wreck of the Titanic. In Germany, where I live, the German Press Agency (dpa) described the underwater voyage as a modern adventure that became a life-threatening nightmare. At Spektrum der Wissenschaft, we wrote about a race against time. And our English-language sibling publication, Scientific American, covered the perils of deep-sea exploration. The U.S. Coast Guard has deployed a number of forces for the search, the British government has offered to help, and France has sent a special ship.
The submersibles disappearance is a tragedy for its occupants and their families. But why do we give these missing people so much more sympathy and attention than the hundreds of migrants who have died in the Mediterranean in recent days? Why does the fate of a few people who volunteered for an intrepid adventure touch us so much more than that of thousands of desperate people who chose to escape war and poverty? We look at the missing submersible and look away from the capsized lifeboat.
One likely answer: The fate of daring millionaires seems closer to us than that of people fleeing a war. One story smells of adventure, curiosity and luxury; the other smells of fear, despair and misery. If the businessmen are rescued, they will return home to their mansions and villas. With the migrants, on the other hand, new questions arise, including which emergency accommodation they will be taken to and at whose expense. Others wonder whether they shouldnt be sent straight back to their home countries, which they have just left under nerve-racking duress. You might see yourself in one of these two vessels, if you only had the money. You hope to never be in the other, not for all the money in the world.
Shouldnt suffering through no fault of ones own trigger a stronger reflex to help than a disaster born of the thirst for adventure? Not necessarily. As studies from social psychology show, our sense of empathy for others can overwhelm us. We often ignore peoples pain to release ourselves from feeling responsible. In the case of the migrants, one could almost speak of an emotional numbing process. When the influx of migrants into Germany was about to peak in 2015, its then chancellor Angela Merkel made entry into the country easier. She was celebrated for her welcoming cultureuntil the mood suddenly changed and nearly reversed. The German population felt overwhelmed, as did our political parties. The asylum seekers were criminalized, fueling public resentment against them. Now no one hesitates to discuss the need to monitor European borders more closely.
*snip*
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The World Rallied to Find Missing Titan Sub but Ignored Shipwrecked Migrants [View all]
Nevilledog
Jun 2023
OP
I read about the overloaded boat as I was reading about the Titanic party.
TreasonousBastard
Jun 2023
#1
Thank you...ranting about the lack of interest by the West is shameful.
Alexander Of Assyria
Jun 2023
#5
There is as also that largely mythical "law of the sea" which says....
TreasonousBastard
Jun 2023
#14
Which is what happened, for both the migrant boat and the submersible
muriel_volestrangler
Jun 2023
#16
Drowning billionaires much more newsworthy than drowning children and refugees in general...
Alexander Of Assyria
Jun 2023
#4
Economic infrastructure, food , water, safety of North Africa, the Sahara is the fundamental
Tetrachloride
Jun 2023
#7