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Are people preparing to wear Ebola-themed costumes being insensitive to the deaths of thousands of West Africans?
Actually, no, writes Kyle Smith, the West Africans have nothing to do with it… When we make fun of Ebola, we’re just mocking our own fears of death.
Why it’s OK to wear an Ebola costume for Halloween
By Kyle Smith
October 16, 2014 | 5:17pm
It’s unfortunate that so many deceased methamphetamine addicts had to have their condition belittled last year when “Breaking Bad” hazmat suits were a hot Halloween outfit. Three years ago, the October death of Steve Jobs was an occasion for national mourning, yet a mere three weeks later it inspired a turtleneck-wearing zombie Steveto trot around holding an iPad with a coffin labeled iDied. Wife-beaters and pedophiles aren’t funny, and yet people dress up as them for Halloween.
Today, people are dying of Ebola even as your fellow citizens try to think of ways to turn unimaginable suffering into cute costume ideas. You get the sense that people don’t have the proper serious attitude about a potentially nightmarish epidemic.
Medical professionals are objecting: the idea “definitely rubs me the wrong way,” Philadelphia physician’s assistant Maria McKenna told Associated Press. “This thing with the costumes, is it really that funny?”
https://nypost.com/2014/10/16/why-its-ok-to-wear-an-ebola-costume-for-halloween/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow
“Uh, no, I’m not really making fun of your suffering, I’m just expressing my own fear of death”….I’ll go out on a limb and guess anyone making a joke of Ebola this Halloween isn’t that deep a thinker.
I feel better after reading this blog. I saw some Halloween house decorations in Ridgewood on the Ebola theme and I was angry and self righteous. Now that the idea is expressed that the decor is just expressing fear of death it makes sense to me. And I have calmed down.