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Depends on whether you are laughing at them or with them.
Indeed. Laughing with them, and at Bryan Adams.
And yes, the Japanese tend to have a completely wacky sense of humour.
There's another aspect of humour; it expreses the feeling of 'thank heavens this isn't happening to me', while knowing that some disaster could indeed befall you.
Hopefully humour helps people get through. Reminds me of the story of the chap who entered a pub in London during the bombings; covered in blood, shirt torn up, the first thing he asked for was the cricket score. Then a pint.
And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014
And yes, the Japanese tend to have a completely wacky sense of humour.
There's another aspect of humour; it expreses the feeling of 'thank heavens this isn't happening to me', while knowing that some disaster could indeed befall you.
Hopefully humour helps people get through. Reminds me of the story of the chap who entered a pub in London during the bombings; covered in blood, shirt torn up, the first thing he asked for was the cricket score. Then a pint.
Mitch, I like you and enjoy your posts but I think you just about trudged the fine line between going out on a limb and being a hypocrite. Unless of course you have Japanese friends and or family to share the joke with, otherwise you're just an ignorant westerner who thinks that humour here is acceptable.
I can only imagine that if I was homeless after a tsunami, and Sizewell B was about to go supernova and irradiate my family I wouldn't be in the mood for a joke no matter how thigh slappingly funny.
Human nature, on 9/11 I was working at a business advice centre and within about an hour of the attacks people from local businesses were calling to find out how it might affect them
sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice - Asimov (sort of)
there is no art in a factory, not even in an art factory - Mixerman
Human nature, on 9/11 I was working at a business advice centre and within about an hour of the attacks people from local businesses were calling to find out how it might affect them
Not sure that's the same though.
Protecting your own livelyhood in the face of a disaster is several miles away from getting a piece of the action IMHO.
Protecting your own livelyhood in the face of a disaster is several miles away from getting a piece of the action IMHO.
true but it was the speed at which the enquiries came in, no one knew what the hell was going on and it was surprising how quickly people reverted to self-preservation - I'm not sure if even the most prescient business advisor could predict how an unprecedented terrorist attack on the worlds major superpower could affect a local SME based half the world away within an hour of the event unfolding.
sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice - Asimov (sort of)
there is no art in a factory, not even in an art factory - Mixerman
No, hate the player as well. The game is sh1t because it is set up in such a way as there is always an opportunity for some vile little worm to make money out of someone else's misfortune.
One thing to consider is that it's a continuum that includes:
- Vulture funds buying up 3rd world debt from Eastern European countries at 10% of face value and then enforcing the debt through courts in other countries.
- Selling torture equipment to repressive regimes (if we don't, someone else will)
- Investing in tobacco companies.
- Investing in Tesco (who I imagine are the largest sellers of tobacco in the UK).
Want to avoid all these nasties that make money out of the misery of others? Then you can put your money into National Savings bonds and fund UK war crimes abroad, or whatever else we fancy. So we're all on the continuum somewhere.
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