Koroviev said:
It's crass to publicly express apathy for someone who has recently passed away. If people really didn't care, then I don't think they would feel so compelled to announce it. Rather, I think that such people are really seeking to dismiss those who do feel sadness with respect to the death. It's not cool.
More than that, it's crass and immature to express
open contempt for someone who just passed away (as Spoony did publicly via Twitter, and as many have done since). I understand it may be justified if that person abused you, but if you don't even know them then just shut up-you never even really knew them!
Lots of young people trying to prove how "bad" they are in this thread.
Not every death is going to be personally tragic
to you, but every death is a tragedy to someone, probably even somebody pretty decent. To laugh in the face of someone's loss is to deny them the human sympathy
you yourself would probably expect from others in similar circumstances. It's nearsighted and juvenile. Yes, death is natural. So is disease, or an earthquake leveling a city. Lots of tragic situations are "natural" to living on this planet. We shouldn't live in fear of them every day, but accepting pain and loss when it comes is an essential aspect of our humanity.
I like how people are jumping to extremes. "If I don't laugh off death callously, then I'm letting it 'get to me' and ruining my life dwelling on it!" I would expect people who truly "feel nothing" to not talk about it, because they don't feel anything and thus probably don't care. Bringing up a death just so you can say how much you don't care or hate the person who died (again, Spoony) isn't behavior I would expect from grown men and women.