←back to thread

351 points perihelions | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.418s | source
Show context
phendrenad2 ◴[] No.44535175[source]
I think this NPR article is too quick to put a positive spin on this. They have made a nice little story here with a happy ending. Farmers had blackened turmeric -> they used a random yellow die they found -> massive lead spike in everyone's bloodstream -> Americans came in with a xray gun and saved the day -> no more lead in the blood.

But if you ascribe even the slightest but of agency to any of the non-Americans involved, you have to wonder if this problem will come back.

replies(6): >>44535788 #>>44535898 #>>44536063 #>>44536177 #>>44537546 #>>44538844 #
Amezarak ◴[] No.44535898[source]
I don't think the NPR reporter is deliberately spinning the story. I think a lot of people don't really believe that other people are really different from them. The reporter would never knowingly poison people for money, so it's not comprehensible to them that lots of people in the world just don't care whether they do or not. The only reason in their minds that people would do such a thing are economic desperation combined with ignorance; if those two factors are gone, they really believe the problem has been forever solved.
replies(2): >>44536026 #>>44537235 #
1. kayodelycaon ◴[] No.44537235[source]
In the course of history, it wasn’t that long ago when people brought snacks to an execution.

That’s a little hard to wrap your head around.

replies(1): >>44537776 #
2. umeshunni ◴[] No.44537776[source]
By it wasn't that long ago, you mean 10 years ago.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deera_Square