By SHAUNA ANDERSON
This morning my seven-year-old son asked me the most uncomfortable question I’ve ever been asked as a parent.
As he stood dressed in his green and gold school uniform, he looked up at me with his dark eyes and asked me why the black ninja was trying to cut the bald man’s head off.
Did you cringe as you read that?
Because I cringed as he said it.
But for a seven-year old whose world is Lego Ninjago and Minecraft diamond-swords that’s what he saw.
He saw a bad guy dressed in black. He saw a glistening knife. He saw a man about to die for a cause that most of us cannot understand.
wasn’t in jailIt was a complicated conversation after a complicated morning.
Working as the News Editor for Mamamia, I get up early to write the daily news wrap. The horrors of the world screamed at me this morning from Twitter. Outrage over the beheading of James Wright Foley, anger at newspaper publishing front-page photos of the act taking place.
Many people feel that newspapers have a duty to print such atrocities on their front pages; they say the world needs to know and that such horrific things can’t be stopped unless they are talked about.
The hashtag #ISISmediablackout quickly gained momentum yesterday after the YouTube video of Foley was broadcast.
It is an age-old debate for photo editors worldwide whether to print graphic images, and it is one where my feelings as a journalist and as a parent clash.