by Nomad
After reading the Laney Christmas story (h/t to zane), I admit I got a tad weepy- but in a good way. Yes yes, it's true: beneath this rhino-skin lies a sensitive jellyfish.
Despite so much evidence to the contrary, I, like Anne Frank, want to have faith in the goodness of people. Yeah, I want to believe that people are good.
So sue me. I was born this way.
Strangers on a Subway
Last July, another story in the same vein went practically unnoticed.
When a woman slipped between a train and a station platform just north of Tokyo on Monday, about 40 commuters and railroad employees worked together to tilt the 32-ton subway car enough to one side so that she could be pulled to safety.The Associated Press writes that the train car's suspension system "allows it to lean to either side, according to the Yomiuri newspaper, Japan's largest daily." The woman was not seriously injured and, the AP adds, "after just an eight-minute delay, the train went on its way."
There's no real reason why this story should have attracted very much attention, I suppose.
Things like this happen all the time but they hardly ever get much airtime or ink. News networks, like CNN, generally prefer enthusiastic spokespeople and charismatic leaders to interview to help them package things up neatly.
This was another spontaneous act of a
compassionate but faceless crowd. The empathetic mob, if you will. Such stories
are, to use a cliche, heart-warming. Common at Christmas time.
With so much evidence of our greedy, perfidious, violent or destructive urges, stories like these make us feel happy again to be a human.
So it's worth taking a closer look I think.