"okay i actually really like britney spears new song"

May 02, 2011 09:21

The weekend was kind of lame, not gonna lie. Saturday I had work in the morning in Winston-Salem, then I drove all the way home and ended up being late to the Japanese party (also very, very tired). I stayed for the movie though I slept through parts of it; I'd already seen it senior year for my pop culture class. 笑の大学 is actually a really ( Read more... )

politics, japanese, facebook, friends, ponderables, the world, work, tweet tweet, movies, technology, real life

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snowflakie06 May 2 2011, 13:52:57 UTC
And you know, if I weren't so addicted to my computer, I wouldn't have known about bin Laden until much later because, as it turns out, I can focus when I want to. So there.

*gigglefit* I think the amount of time between my overhearing it on the news because my mom was watching it and reading it on my f-list was like two minutes, tops.

My family has never seemed to be big on the whole, "I was there at a historical moment!!1!" thing - in fact, they don't really seem to talk about those kinds of things.My parents are the same, which is a shame :\ I only know where they were when the planes hit the Twin Towers because I was old enough to understand what was going on. Anything else, I can only guess. My grandma is also pretty much the same, she hasn't ever mentioned where she was at the time of any historical moment but she's talked about what she was doing afterward and how it affected her. Like she talks about being an Air Raid Warden in WWII and how that was kind of funny because she was this small girl who got to boss around older ( ... )

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the_great_elk May 2 2011, 17:10:24 UTC
History is a funny thing, and the way we think about it even more so. I find it so odd that I will never be able to re-see my Facebook newsfeed from last night, even though within it was all of our first reactions to news that history (maybe) will see as generation changing. To be honest, I imagine most of us were going about our normal lives with no reason to learn about the news - maybe we were out, or at the gym, or cooking, or watching DVDs.

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snowflakie06 May 2 2011, 21:40:03 UTC
I think perhaps if something bigger had been announced and not just the death of a single man (ie the end of the war) then more people probably would have been doing more than just stopping for a few minutes to see what was up, make sure it wasn't a hoax, etc. But seeing as it's just the death of one man, albeit one who's done a lot of damage, I for one am not about to go celebrating and it feels weird to hear/see people saying things like 'omg yay he's dead!' Of course, that might just be me and my attitude towards death. I don't like the idea of celebrating or relishing it, no matter who it is. Maybe if he'd been captured then I'd be going 'hurray, they caught him!' rather than wondering 'what does this mean?'

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the_great_elk May 3 2011, 03:43:13 UTC
I think that's an interesting point. I wonder if I - or more of the world - would have responded differently if he had been captured. I also wonder how worried we should be about retaliation, or those kinds of things.

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