1990UMFan
03-30-2013, 02:49 PM
A few things to consider, creepy as they may be, but:
-How many murders are happening right now, right as I type this or you read this, that will never be solved, that you will never hear about, because of the lack of a show like UM being on the air?
-How many people in the last week, let's say, have mysteriously disappeared, never to be seen or heard from again?
-How many teens have run away from home in the past week, either winding up having a sordid life of being used and abused, or being killed, like Amy Billig?
-How many young girls are being kidnapped and abused as Sharon Marshall, forced into a life of misery?
-How many young women are being abused, tortured, thrown out to sleep in the streets, being set on the path to becoming damaged, sad people like Aileen Wuornos?
-How many serial murderers are active right now, as you read this, planning out their next crime?
It's a very morbid, dark thread, but we focus on so many cases that happened 20, 30 years ago, without perhaps stopping to think that all of the worst nightmares portrayed on Unsolved Mysteries are happening right now, all across America, in big cities and small towns. We focus on cold cases, but there are cases which are totally warm, which someone should focus on.
There's a new Angela Hammond, a new Tammy Lyn Leppert, a new Amy Billig created everyday. Right now, some innocent person somewhere is being raped, murdered, tortured, or has become one of the "missing." And this happened last night, and it will happen somewhere tonight, and tomorrow as well--without end. Innocent, sad lives being extinguished long before their time. Violence and murder can never truly be stopped totally--but they can be combated and lessened. What we should have is
1) Strong methods in place to prevent these senseless tragedies, and to prevent teenage runaways (which STILL happen).
2) A show like UM to tell us about these cases, near and far.
If I had any political power, I'd create a station, a publicly funded station or two (think PBS), which would focus on crimes--Murders, rapes, missing person's cases, etc. If we can have PBS be publicly funded, why not something like this which would also, in it's own way, serve the public? In a way, a channel like "The Unsolved Mysteries" channel would serve the public MORE than PBS.
-How many murders are happening right now, right as I type this or you read this, that will never be solved, that you will never hear about, because of the lack of a show like UM being on the air?
-How many people in the last week, let's say, have mysteriously disappeared, never to be seen or heard from again?
-How many teens have run away from home in the past week, either winding up having a sordid life of being used and abused, or being killed, like Amy Billig?
-How many young girls are being kidnapped and abused as Sharon Marshall, forced into a life of misery?
-How many young women are being abused, tortured, thrown out to sleep in the streets, being set on the path to becoming damaged, sad people like Aileen Wuornos?
-How many serial murderers are active right now, as you read this, planning out their next crime?
It's a very morbid, dark thread, but we focus on so many cases that happened 20, 30 years ago, without perhaps stopping to think that all of the worst nightmares portrayed on Unsolved Mysteries are happening right now, all across America, in big cities and small towns. We focus on cold cases, but there are cases which are totally warm, which someone should focus on.
There's a new Angela Hammond, a new Tammy Lyn Leppert, a new Amy Billig created everyday. Right now, some innocent person somewhere is being raped, murdered, tortured, or has become one of the "missing." And this happened last night, and it will happen somewhere tonight, and tomorrow as well--without end. Innocent, sad lives being extinguished long before their time. Violence and murder can never truly be stopped totally--but they can be combated and lessened. What we should have is
1) Strong methods in place to prevent these senseless tragedies, and to prevent teenage runaways (which STILL happen).
2) A show like UM to tell us about these cases, near and far.
If I had any political power, I'd create a station, a publicly funded station or two (think PBS), which would focus on crimes--Murders, rapes, missing person's cases, etc. If we can have PBS be publicly funded, why not something like this which would also, in it's own way, serve the public? In a way, a channel like "The Unsolved Mysteries" channel would serve the public MORE than PBS.