@Binati_Sheth
Binati Sheth
@Binati_Sheth · 2:21

Why do similar things get different reactions?

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So I think there's been a trending story recently of someone now identified as a British citizen who carved something for his girlfriend and things of this sort in the Roman Coliseum, and people are rightfully angry about that. And here we have two ancient Greek travelers whose graffitis have become popular, so to speak. Both of these, I suppose, are a way of someone letting the world know that they were there. A version of immortalizing their experience in a place

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@SeekingPlumb

@Binati_Sheth

I suppose it's also like items have only so much value in the here and now, but then they become vintage and then antiques, and then they take on greater meaning and greater monetary value. I don't know, it's interesting
@Mehnaz_Amjad
Mehnaz Amjad
@Mehnaz_Amjad · 3:38
So perhaps that's the reason why his idea is not bad, but the platform that he's trying to choose may set a wrong precedence for others. So therefore, the reaction to his expression visa vis the graffiti, the Greek graffiti found, which in itself is a thing of the past from the Bygone era, from, I guess, the Egyptian civilization that's again, a heritage thing to be really upheld and maintained and kind of saved and kept
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