I hate when people cater to the minority, in this case, the families of 220
people, out of the 6.8 billion on the planet. Just for the sake of argument,
lets say that each of those people had 20 people they were associated with
that could possibly be on this list. That comes out to 4400 people who
"might" be both on this list, and knew someone on the plane, out of a grand
total of 6.8 billion people on the planet.
When the twin towers fell, the tsunami hit, and Katrina pummeled LA, there
is then cause for dignity and tact. Many thousands of people were affected
by those events.
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 2:38 AM, William Donzelli <wdonzelli at gmail.com>wrote:
I think you just lowered the bar. I would have hoped
you had more
sense. What if the person is in grief, stricken by a loss? Do you
think they are going to be reading this list? What will it be like
when they catch up reading their messages? Will it comfort them when
they find their loss is called insignificant?
Folks, lets kill this right now.
--
Will