It's difficult to imagine just how shocked and traumatized the Virginia Tech campus and the town of Blacksburg must be right now. Then consider that Monday's carnage represents an average day in parts of Baghdad. Like today, when four bombs have killed at least 125 people.
Update: Juan Cole:
I keep hearing from US politicians and the US mass media that the "situation is improving" in Iraq. The profound sorrow and alarm produced in the American public by the horrific shootings at Virginia Tech should give us a baseline for what the Iraqis are actually living through. They have two Virginia Tech-style attacks every single day. Virginia Tech will be gone from the headlines and the air waves by next week this time in the US, though the families of the victims will grieve for a lifetime. But next Tuesday I will come out here and report to you that 64 Iraqis have been killed in political violence. And those will mainly be the ones killed by bombs and mortars. They are only 13% of the total; most Iraqis killed violently, perhaps 500 a day throughout the country if you count criminal and tribal violence, are just shot down. Shot down, like the college students and professors at Blacksburg.
No kidding. I've been mildly ranting about this for two days. Yes, the VT shooting was horrible but 30 people dead is even less than a drop in the bucket when you consider the global picture. And not just Iraq, either.
It irks me so much when people act like this country is the full sum of the world.
Posted by: Karyn at April 18, 2007 03:11 PMWhen the shootings were going on less than a mile from my window, I never once was afraid to go outside and talk a nice walk in the sunshine.
In Iraq, I think that would be a very very different story.
Congratulations again, Mr. President, and same to your ex-Trotskyite-turned-right-wing-warmonger Neocon friends!
Posted by: Jon at April 18, 2007 07:07 PMA very good interview of Juan Cole from yesterday or today...
http://dissentradio.com/radio/07_04_17_cole.mp3
lasts 30 minutes.
Posted by: Jon at April 18, 2007 07:11 PMEvery day, in the US, 82 people are shot dead. Monday wasn't a particularly unusual day, just unusually spatially concentrated.
Posted by: ajay at April 19, 2007 05:06 AM