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  • My mate’s little bro passed away today, and I’ve been sitting here watching Facebook go mental with tribute groups and people writing on his wall etc. Some of these people knew him, but if you feel that bad about it, you don’t rush out and join the Facebook group. Furthermore, what kind of deplorable shit writes on a dead kids wall saying “sounded like you were a top lad and will be missed”. Sounded like?! This guy never even met him, and he’s writing RIP up! The internet really does bring out the fucking worst in people. What a bunch of insensitive, disrespectful cunts.

    shows the level of intellect people possess these days.

    on a failbook note, I’ve had to delete mine, and get a new one….so many dozy bastards adding me who recon they know me cause they saw me in a pub once. fuckin stupid

    Sorry to hear about that mate. Life is a cruel bitch sometimes. 🙁

    It’s cool man, I was only really an acquaintance of the kid who died, but his big bro is one of my best mates, so I’m more just support than anything. It makes me fucking livid that people can be so disrespectful though.

    I know what you mean.. a girl in my class at college just died and someone made a group for her and it’s weird how people that didnt even know her were writing stuff all over it. someone even wrote something like “I didn’t know you but your brother is such a strong person” and it’s like, hmmm. weird thing to write.

    When one of my mates died when we were in high school there were people there crying at his funeral that had never even spoken to him! .. wtf?

    It’s not that disrespectful though, surely it’s okay to leave a message of respect no? It would be disrespectful if they left one saying who cares or something similar but a message of respect isn’t so bad is it. When the Norway shootings happened I left a message on a facebook page saying RIP to all the fallen. Surely that isn’t so bad is it?

    (not trying to cast a bad light on this but there’s a vast difference between disrespect and respect, just my two cents anyway)

    Personally I think it takes away from all the people who knew someone saying what an amazing kid he was, to have someone who is basically posting up for some sense of their own satisfaction make a snap judgement without even meeting him.

    I agree, I can’t stand all these tribute groups, the people who couldn’t be bothered with the person alive are trying to get attention by being sad and upset. When I was 16 one of my good friends died and when I went to her funeral I had to watch the service through video link from the church hall outside because of all the ‘glory seekers’ (people who didn’t really know her) taking up the church. To this day I’m still sad because it felt like I wasn’t really there. If the person meant that much you wouldn’t really have time or thoughts to be setting up little Facebook groups. In saying that, paying respects for the family to read at a later date can help them see how much the person who passed away was loved.

    Its sad about your mate’s wee bro and I feel for the family and friends he left behind.
    WRT fb tribute pages they seem nowadays to be an invitation to jump on a bandwagon rather than posts from people who really knew them; its one of the many things about fb I don’t like along with its potential to allow stalking and the fact that anything you post on it may as well be on the front page of a newspaper privacywise. :you_crazy
    People are far too trusting with their personal information and its a dangerous thing – what joe or jane public can see should not include anything that tells them where exactly you live, when you are going to be out of your home or information which could allow them to make a loan or creditcard application.

    Facebook can be a dangerous game if not used with much caution. I deleted mine a while back, I had too many people on there I wasn’t really bothered about.

    I have to say I have one but its in permanent mothballs pretty much as I don’t trust it {I still have it for lost pals to get in touch with me through though I then move to emails as quickly as possible}

    @Moonie 447209 wrote:

    Personally I think it takes away from all the people who knew someone saying what an amazing kid he was, to have someone who is basically posting up for some sense of their own satisfaction make a snap judgement without even meeting him.

    Yeah I suppose mate. I do agree with messages that are a bit too personal (when they don’t actually know em) aren’t appropriate but one of general sympathy I don’t think is too out of order.

    I’m wondering if its how the UK (and maybe other nations) have begun to have ‘out poorings’ for bereavement and grief, as it seems to me it has changed over the years,

    I wonder whether it started with Diana – as this is the first time I remember such an ‘out pooring’ of grief and flowers and things for someone, esp of whom most people did not really know other than the image she had when portrayed by the media

    as you cant seem to drive past a road where an incident has happened with out seeing flowers and acknowledgement of what has ahppened,

    I’m not saying this is right or wrong – I dont think it is how I would pay my respects

    but I do think grief is a tricky one, and can be infectious to others around us

    but I think paying respects to the family and friends left behind isnt a bad thing as they are the ones that have to deal with the aftermath –

    and we need to prehaps realisie we do live in a technological era,

    and this may be the first time these younger ones have experienced something like this and arent thinking deeply about it – but just want to say something that they think may be comforting to those left behind? and that using ‘social media’ sites is how they think too do it

    I was asked to help my dad put up his retirements party’s photos, on facebook as a show of respect to one of his closest friends as there were alot of him in them, so even the olds are using social media sites

    and I also got teary, when last week I picked them up from his wake (suicide at 52) mainly because I was so shocked at how distraught and ill my dad was (he had actually collapsed at the funeral because he was so upset he went into a hypo) and its been so hard to see how he has just not been able to process it, I think due to the mannor of the death.

    I tend to pay respects to the fallen in the pub. Raise a pint to em.

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