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No best answer has yet been selected by cliffsdoll. 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.The act is sick, but I doubt the photographers are hardfaced & insencsitive, the photographer himself said it was instinct, he wasn't registering in his mind what he was shooting. It is devastating to watch & I have been sobbing since it started, but it's a part of history now, it will never be forgotten & rightly so!
I dont really understand why there was a kind of shame almost on the jumpers it's too terrifying to even try to imagine what they were going through.
...I don't think the act was sick at all, I admire the bravery of the "jumpers" imensley, and I cannot begin to imagine what I would have done in their sittuation. As for the images , it's the time we live in , we have the technology that was not around to capture such terrible events that have happened in the past. I too remembered the image from the papers on september 12th , and I didi find them terribly poignant and very moving , however what I did find disturbing was the journalist who tried to identify the "falling man" (wrongly and at great distress to the family) ...like they said in the documentary there was no need to identify him.
...and I'm glad to say we are lucky to live in a country who has freedom of choice, I chose to watch the documentary, you chose not too....
Repulsive or horrifying images are nothing new, they are a record of events in history, however distasteful, which I believe the programme showed to great effect.
The picture of the handcuffed Korean shot in the head abd the burnt children running from the napalmed village were just a few examples used by the programme. Does anyone remember the picture on the front of a national newspaper taken from roughly 6 feet of all those people crushed against the fencing at Hillsborough?
I thought the programme dealt with the whole issue very well. It also showed the other issue of the man who was more at peace over the issue, knowing why his wife had to do what she did, that she wasn't crushed under millions of tons of steel and concrete.
IMHO it was an immensely brave act to do what those people had to. They had no other option. Choke to death fighting for breath or being burnt alive, I believe they showed unbelievable courage.
I'm not sure if it was sick, but I agree that trying to find the man in the photograph shouldn't have happened.
They tried to say that it was that photograph, which made people remember, but the thing that makes me remember is the pictures of the twin towers burning and then the collapse of each one. I thought that these pictures were very distressing and they have left an indelible image on my mind. I for one will never forget.
I think we need images like this to bring home the horror of war and terrorism.
To say that X number of people died in an act of terrorism somehow doesn't affect us nearly so much as hearing the personal stories of those involved.
I know everyone was horrified at the collapse of the twin towers, possible more so seeing it live on TV all around the world,and knowing there was nothing you could do about it.