Clearly aren’t as important as bombs at home. Check these out…
- Twin bombings hit Iraqi capital
- 30 dead in Iraq cafe bombing
- Suicide bombers kill up to 90 Shias in Iraq
- Car bomb kills 18 children in Iraq
A small sampling of almost daily news reports about innocent civilians being killed by suicide bomb attacks in Iraq.
Are Londoners, New Yorkers, Madrileños somehow more important than Iraqi civilians?
Where are the protests, the displays of public mourning and moral outrage … even the public debate?
50-something Londoners were killed on July 7, 2005 … almost a daily average in Baghdad. How is that we westerners feel comfortable maintaining this obvious double standard?
UPDATE 16 July: major attacks in 2007
- 16 July: At least 85 die in twin bombings in Kirkuk
- 7 July: 130 killed in Amirli market bombing
- 19 June: At least 78 die in Baghdad mosque blast
- 18 April: Up to 200 killed in car bombings in Baghdad
- 29 March: At least 60 killed in double suicide bombing in Baghdad market
- 6 March: At least 90 killed in double suicide bombing in Hilla
- 3 Feb: At least 130 die in suicide truck bombing in Baghdad
- 22 Jan: 88 killed in Baghdad car bombings

An Iraqi girl walks past glass shattered during overnight clashes
between US forces and militants in Baghdad.
Yes, I agree, it always amazes me when national TV news in the UK would run something like “Brown plans change to tax law” as their top news story ahead of “12 die in roadside bomb in Baghdad”. Especially since we are actually actively involved in that country.
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Because we are arrogant and self-righteous, as societies. That kind of insensitivity is what allows us to wage war in the first place.
A friend of mine was commenting today on the fact that the US has not formally declared war (per the US constitution) since WWII. The fact that we are AT WAR doesn’t seem to count. 😕
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My guess is that media organisations do it because, in order to make money, they follow what most people are interested in, and not what is objectively important or more newsworthy.
When we hear, day after day, that someone has walked into yet another bazaar in Iraq and blown himself and half the people there to kingdom come, it’s us who get turned off. We are the people flicking the switches over to Big Brother and the X-Factor. The marketing organisations realise that, so they follow what we do.
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Bomb attacks strike Iraqi capital
Symbolic strike at Iraqi sanctum
Dozens dead in fresh Iraq attacks
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I don’t even begin to understand how this got so prevalent, and how to stop it.
I realize it’s a protest against the invaders (U.S.), but I really find myself wondering if it will stop once we’re gone? It’s devastatingly effective in disrupting *everything*. Sort of a “If I can’t have XXX, no one can!” 😕
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More than 150 dead in Iraq blasts
[this is the third update today – it started off as 50 dead, then 80 and now more than 150]
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Iraq suicide bomb hits fuel lorry
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Lurking and agreeing wholeheartedly.
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Words fail me …
Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran
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Bomb kills many in Iraq holy city
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Baghdad car bomb blast kills 29
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Car bomb explodes in Iraqi city
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Bombings leave many dead in Iraq
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Bomb devastates market in Baghdad
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Iraq car bomb kills at least 20
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Baghdad truck bomb kills dozens
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Baghdad rush hour bomb ‘kills 20’
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Iraq market truck bomb kills 105
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Iraq oil city blasts kill dozens
I’ve also updated the original post.
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Fears over rising Iraq bomb toll
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Pingback: no end in sight … « casa az
Twin bombs kill scores in Baghdad
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Dozens killed in Baghdad attacks
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87 Killed In Violent Kerfuffle
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Well, it seems nobody is reading this post other than myself as the previous satirical Onion article above went unnoticed…
Toxic world fallout from Iraq invasion
Fucking oil, eh?
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Can’t live with it – can’t live without it
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Dozens die in attacks across Iraq
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“Mission Accomplished” – George W. Bush, 1 May 2003.
During the speech in May, Bush said, “The battle of Iraq is one victory in a war on terror that began on September 11, 2001, and still goes on.”
Yeah. Right…. Dumbfuck.
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Iraq bomber kills many at funeral
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Dozens dead as Iraq cities bombed
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Baghdad bus stop bomb ‘kills 51’
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