News0 min ago
Why Do The Media Use This Phrase?
18 Answers
If a person is killed in an accident, murdered or some other tragedy why are we always told in the media they were a well respected member of the community. It somehow implies that if they were not a well respected person it could be overlooked as not so important.
A life is a precious thing whether or not they be beggar or king!
A life is a precious thing whether or not they be beggar or king!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by needawin. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think it's just one of their standard phrases to fill out the article.
When I was a nipper I didn't understand the regularly used phrase 'a man is helping police with their enquiries'.
It was years before I realised it wasn't a good sort, voluntarily giving up his time to help the hard pressed officers.
When I was a nipper I didn't understand the regularly used phrase 'a man is helping police with their enquiries'.
It was years before I realised it wasn't a good sort, voluntarily giving up his time to help the hard pressed officers.
Hoppy....as my reading improved I was able to lose the high squeaky laugh I had developed so as not to be arrested for laughing like a man.....because..
I read a report told of a man charged with the manslaughter of a young boy....his defence was that he was tickling him.....I then decided manslaughter was the offence of making someone laugh till they died......
I became a very serious child..... :-)
I read a report told of a man charged with the manslaughter of a young boy....his defence was that he was tickling him.....I then decided manslaughter was the offence of making someone laugh till they died......
I became a very serious child..... :-)
Perhaps those who use the term 'well-respected member of the community' are aware of the way that conversations go on in pubs and elsewhere? People always seem to be ready to believe the worst about a murder victim.
For example, if a guy in his 20s gets beaten to death in his own home, people will often say (with no justification whatsoever) "I'll bet that he was a drug dealer, who just got what what was coming to him". Similarly, if it was an old guy who got beaten to death, you'll hear people say "He was probably a pedo and one of his victims found out where he was now living and decided to get his own back". If the victim happened to be an Asian shopkeeper there will probably be two sets of rumours going around, with one suggesting that the killing was linked to Islamic terrorism and the other suggesting that he must have been a member of a paedophile gang.
So saying that someone was a 'well-respected member of the community' might just be a way of trying to forestall such rumours.
For example, if a guy in his 20s gets beaten to death in his own home, people will often say (with no justification whatsoever) "I'll bet that he was a drug dealer, who just got what what was coming to him". Similarly, if it was an old guy who got beaten to death, you'll hear people say "He was probably a pedo and one of his victims found out where he was now living and decided to get his own back". If the victim happened to be an Asian shopkeeper there will probably be two sets of rumours going around, with one suggesting that the killing was linked to Islamic terrorism and the other suggesting that he must have been a member of a paedophile gang.
So saying that someone was a 'well-respected member of the community' might just be a way of trying to forestall such rumours.
It is a stock phrase, it's along the lines of dying of cancer.
Unlike any other disease, for some reason, you always die after 'a battle' or 'a battle bravely fought ...' - but only with cancer.
When I had a cancer scare last year (negative) I told my family not to say that I died after any kind of battle, I did not 'battle', I contracted cancer, and I was severely peed off with it from the day I was diagnosed until the day I died, but no 'battle' occurred.
Unlike any other disease, for some reason, you always die after 'a battle' or 'a battle bravely fought ...' - but only with cancer.
When I had a cancer scare last year (negative) I told my family not to say that I died after any kind of battle, I did not 'battle', I contracted cancer, and I was severely peed off with it from the day I was diagnosed until the day I died, but no 'battle' occurred.
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