I think the difference is time and images. We have film of one of the plane's hitting a tower, film of both towers on fire, pictures of people jumping to their deaths from the towers, and film of the towers collapsing. The tragedy happened all within the space of a few hours.Some Schmo wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 10:45 pmThere's no doubt. That was one of the scariest days of my life. Another would be the day after Trump was elected.
This thread isn't really about wondering why we care about 9/11. It's about why so many people don't care about the death toll of COVID that is 67 times bigger. Sure, 9/11 was in our faces and visceral, and I think we should all have sat up and paid attention that day. My real question is why the hell so many Americans aren't sitting up now.
I'm forced to conclude that many Americans aren't really all that concerned with their fellow Americans' lives, and just enjoy a good excuse to go kick some brown people's asses.
Severe COVID-19 illness and death happens in a chunk every day. And the disaster happens largely inside hospitals, where few pictures are taken. Human brains have trouble grasping the scope of a disaster that occurs over time and almost entirely out of sight.
I think leadership also explains some of the difference. GWB worked on uniting the country against a common foe. DJT pitted Americans against each other.
I grew up mostly in Bellingham, Washington. Back then it was a town with about 40,000 residents. When I think about my hometown being obliterated five times, my brain starts to grasp the scale of our loss. For some folks, maybe the complete destruction of the population of Salt Lake City is a more meaningful comparison.