Originally posted by Ms Diddles
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I suspect people like to be "terrified", or angered, by sensational news stories, as long as they believe the events are unlikely to affect them personally!
The unfortunate women of Spitalfields were uniquely qualified to describe being in fear of their lives, but also knew that many of their number had little choice but to remain vulnerable while the killer was active. That's the definition of terror.
Today, many people like to be scared or angered by stuff that can't hurt them, such as footballers who take the knee to show that black lives matter to them, for example, or a vaccine that can give protection against a deadly virus. But few appear truly terrified by climate change, which will end up affecting us all. We are more terrified by the thought of having to change the way we are living today.
Serial killers have always grabbed the headlines from far more deadly situations facing the public in general. But for all those poor women in 1888 Whitechapel, the danger was all too real and immediate. It couldn't have been easy for them to stay off the streets or they'd have done so.
Love,
Caz
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