jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anyway, I think the important thing to remember here is that nobody wants to live in a neighborhood where stuff like this happens. Black, white, whatever.
I don't really feel like that is the important issue here. I feel the important issue is that two children are wounded, a number of other children have probably been traumatized, and a man acted heroically. It is the fact that very few seem to consider that to be important that bothers me.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anyway, I think the important thing to remember here is that nobody wants to live in a neighborhood where stuff like this happens. Black, white, whatever.
I don't really feel like that is the important issue here. I feel the important issue is that two children are wounded, a number of other children have probably been traumatized, and a man acted heroically. It is the fact that very few seem to consider that to be important that bothers me.
Yes, print paper.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it was on the back pages of the Metro section but the picture was on the front page.Anonymous wrote:I am also saddened. I just went to Washington Post and found it BURIED as usual. I care deeply, but on a good day I read the headlines on washingtonpost.com and rely on NPR outside of that. Why something like this wouldn't be a top DC headline is the thing that pisses me off. Because if it was a different neighborhood it would definitely get top billing.
Are you talking the print paper? I was talking online. Alot of people only get the Sunday paper.
Anonymous wrote:
Anyway, I think the important thing to remember here is that nobody wants to live in a neighborhood where stuff like this happens. Black, white, whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it was on the back pages of the Metro section but the picture was on the front page.Anonymous wrote:I am also saddened. I just went to Washington Post and found it BURIED as usual. I care deeply, but on a good day I read the headlines on washingtonpost.com and rely on NPR outside of that. Why something like this wouldn't be a top DC headline is the thing that pisses me off. Because if it was a different neighborhood it would definitely get top billing.
Anonymous wrote:The SE residents are correct, the rest of DC doesn't care. They only care as far as to think, "this is why I don't go to SE" or this is why I would never buy in SE. There is outrage when something could have been done differently to avoid the crime/murder. Is this a sad case, absolutely. Can the people on DCUM do something about it? Not really.
Yes it was on the back pages of the Metro section but the picture was on the front page.Anonymous wrote:I am also saddened. I just went to Washington Post and found it BURIED as usual. I care deeply, but on a good day I read the headlines on washingtonpost.com and rely on NPR outside of that. Why something like this wouldn't be a top DC headline is the thing that pisses me off. Because if it was a different neighborhood it would definitely get top billing.