This post was first published on The Drum and has been republished with full permission.
By JONATHAN GREEN
It was a bad day for the violent, senseless killing of innocent people.
In Boston, as you will have seen, three people died after a pair of bombs exploded near the finish line of the city’s legendary marathon. More than 100 have been injured, some with life-threatening severity.
In Iraq, around 50 people died in a series of attacks, most of them involving car bombs. About 300 people were injured.
Both were events of evil intent and ruthless execution, designed to kill and maim; the Boston bombs in a crowded public space, the Iraq bombs in the high traffic of morning rush hour.
Days down the track, the local coverage of the Boston bombings continues to nudge at saturation … a well-trod media path that flows seamlessly from shock to surprised horror to first rattled reactions, through emerging detail to consequence, blame and retribution.
At very few points along the way is the overwhelming flood of content committed to air, screen and print backed up by a proportional flow of fact. Most of the stuff we see and read will be airy guesswork, great wads of repetitive padding around a central core of avid voyeuristic interest, all presented without the normal news-sustaining mechanism of observable evidence.
The point on the disproportionality of Australian response to Boston and Iraq is simple and obvious.
A death is a death. All dismembered bodies suffer varying degrees of appallingly identical agony … and yet only one of these events dominates our media-fed consciousness; only one set of the dead and wounded will have become fixtures in the popular consciousness by week’s end.