I didn't read the OP as implied disrespect for anyone or anything. I read it as asking why are we having a minutes silence for this one. A few people seem to wonder why we should as well. People who say not being in favour of it means you must be anti British haven't really thought it through. They are just making up insults as they go.
I don't know that people deserve respect just for being killed by a gunman. Sympathy, or monetary compensation, may be appropriate in some cases; but I don't know what "respect" means in this context.
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Yet this is where events like this week’s Tunisian silence take us. To reach this point we must ask, what was it about these lives that deserve this particular mark of respect, and not others? Do we bow our heads in silence because a certain numerical threshold has been passed? If so, what are we saying about those who died in smaller numbers? Or in less eye-catching circumstances? “Sorry, but your passing was not spectacular or troubling enough for strangers to mark your time in this life.” //
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