• @[email protected]
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    381 year ago

    It’s easy to see this as a parallel to the value our society places on human lives of different societal classes and nationalities. But I also think the sub story has so much traction because it’s an ongoing story with a fight against the clock, where there’s a, however small, glimmer of hope.

    The boys stuck in the cave in Thailand a while ago weren’t overlooked either.

    • @dan1101
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      241 year ago

      Maybe it’s human nature that more unusual peril gets more attention.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        A kid that falls into a well is interesing. The 200 starving people in the village around that well is not. Anyone could tell you which is more tragic but that doesn’t align with our interest on reading about it/helping.

        • @dan1101
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          11 year ago

          Yeah, and also the sub story was an ongoing mystery and there was definitely a “careless billionaire bastard gets what’s coming to him” aspect to it.

    • beefcat
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      1 year ago

      There’s also the massive scandal over the fact that the submarine was not safe at all and should never have been used for manned missions, making it something of a leopards at my face moment. This has made it emminently memeable, so people are talking about it even more.

      A boat sinking on its way to Libya is definitely more tragic, but also not nearly as unusual or attention grabbing. No sane person is about to make memes about a few hundred dead migrants.