Question:
Is the death of Michael Jackson bigger than Pope John Paul II's death?
2009-06-25 18:20:12 UTC
Is the death of Michael Jackson bigger than Pope John Paul II's death?
22 answers:
2009-06-25 18:28:12 UTC
No, because the Vatican had to choose a new Pope, but there'll never be another Michael Jackson (thank goodness!)
The Comma,, Lady,,,,,
2009-06-25 18:25:57 UTC
Death? Pope John Paul was about life
JMAS II
2009-06-25 18:28:15 UTC
About 4 million people went to Rome for Pope John Paul II's funeral.
2016-11-02 09:54:00 UTC
A weaker federal government with accountability for a countrywide foreign places funds, the Armed compelled, reaching treaties, interstate commerce, dealing with federal lands,... No welfare, wellbeing, or public pension time-commemorated jobs. Federal one-length-fits-all social training are at present reverted to the states alongside with the dismantling of all federal training from the main suitable 50 years. Constitutional amendments for a balanced funds and Congressional time era limits. States and communities cope with tutorial and welfare needs without federal interference. No legislating from the bench. which includes the courts too-many cases overturning the votes of the persons. In all civil fits, the loser will pay the expenses. Being a jurist turns remarkable right into a profession. no longer extra desirable random opportunities required for juries. those in this u . s . a . illegally can no longer positioned across a civil in surprising situation. criminal professionals admitted to the state bar may well be based on the scale of the state's inhabitants. Limits may well be strictly set to the 1980 element. (there's no longer any diverse profession dumping their pointless graduates in super numbers upon society and looking out forward to something persons to %. up the six digit revenue for this new professional). No taxpayer funded scholarships to regulation colleges - or diverse container it rather is saturated.
imacatholic2
2009-06-25 21:32:49 UTC
Hard to tell.



On April 8, 2005, the largest gathering of statesmen in all of history occurred. Over 200 countries sent representatives to the funeral of Pope John Paul II. Here is a partial list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dignitaries_at_the_funeral_of_Pope_John_Paul_II



With love in Christ.
tomas
2009-06-25 18:30:51 UTC
The number of people who only come to know something about two at the event of their death, who would otherwise not know them at all. - Pope more than MJ.



The number of people who already knew something about the two and took notice of their death - I think it would be fairly agreeable MJ more than Pope.
Moiraes Fate
2009-06-25 18:32:53 UTC
Yes. Much. Michael Jackson has touched every part of the world and has changed the face of the entertainment (which, lets face it, is the biggest and most powerful industry in the world) industry forever.



The Pope is only important to Catholics.
2009-06-25 18:26:55 UTC
Ecc 7:1 A good name is better than precious ointment; and the day of death than the day of one's birth.
Coco!
2009-06-25 18:26:29 UTC
i dont even know who Pope John Paul II is but i know Michael Jackson thats for sure!
2009-06-25 18:25:58 UTC
Invalid question!



No one is bigger than John Paul II. He was awesome.
humbled penguin
2009-06-25 18:25:43 UTC
Yes. Many catholics did not even care about his death, sadly, whereas Michael Jackson was viewed as a legend in music.
?
2009-06-25 18:31:33 UTC
where's the link?

is this a hoax,

this is the first ive heard of it

so the pope has got tobe bigger
2009-06-25 18:27:16 UTC
Well according to Wolf Blitzer, MJ is the best known man in the world.
?
2009-06-25 18:25:18 UTC
Pope John who?
Ryan
2009-06-25 18:25:11 UTC
Give it a couple of days and measure both by yourself.

Patience is a virtue.
2009-06-25 18:27:02 UTC
Depends what part of the Earth, you live in...



America does not encompass the whole world...
2009-06-25 22:39:52 UTC
(Continue above answer of m.trung@yahoo.com):



...Besides, the death of John Paul II also created the largest challenge of security. This was a very very complicated issue.



The immensity of the pilgrim presence in Rome and the vast of world leaders: secretary general of the UN, presidents, prime ministers, queens, kings, princes, princesses and diplomatic delegations from nations around the world raised concerns by the College of Cardinals as well as the Italian government and many other governments that the funeral, conclave and installation of a new pope would make Vatican City a great target for terrorism. The anti-terrorism task forces responsible for securing the funeral considered international terrorists the primary potential threat because of the attending dignitaries; domestic terrorism from Italian political extremists was considered less likely.



On April 6th, in advent of the arrival of the United States delegation aboard Air Force One, protected by a military escort - the Italian government issued a no-fly zone within a five-mile radius of Rome. The Italian government considered the 3 Presidents of the United States (Bill Clinton, George Bush; George W. Bush), the first sitting American presidents to attend a papal funeral, as the most tempting targets for terrorists. Official diplomatic delegations from other nations began arriving at the same time.



The Aeronautica Militare Italiana (Italian air force) prepared their aircraft to be launched at a moment's notice in case of a terrorist strike. The Italian Army deployed anti-aircraft missiles around Vatican City, to the grudging dismay of the College of Cardinals. Marina Militare (Italian navy) warships were positioned along the shorelines of Italy armed with torpedoes. Gunboats ran up and down the rivers and waterways of Rome, including the Tiber River which flows around Vatican City. Thousands of snipers were positioned on strategic rooftops throughout the Italian capital as Carabinieri military police task forces swept aqueducts and drains for explosives. Helicopters were dispatched to scan the city streets from above. Plans to close Ciampino Airport from commercial flights and divert air traffic to and from Leonardo da Vinci International Airport in Fiumicino were finalized for the day of the Mass of Requiem and Interment of Pope John Paul II. A day before the greatest funeral, cars and all other transport means were banned in Rome and some other places near Rome, Vatican City. Other smaller civilian commuter and recreational airports were also shut down.



Some of the same security measures that were in effect for the funeral were also in effect for the installation Mass of Pope Benedict XVI on April 24.



More than 200 world leaders included Secretary General of the UN (Kofi Annan), Presidents, Prime Ministers, Queens, Kings, Princes, Princesses and Diplomatic Delegations from nations over the world joined pilgrims and prelates in St. Peter’s Square on Friday 08th April, 2005 to bid an emotional farewell to Pope John Paul II at a funeral that drew millions and millions to Rome.



The death of Michael Jackson may only create the temporarily moment to the world and who loves (his) music (I think this moment will last in months only, and afterward people will soon forget it). Meantime, the death of Pope John Paull II has been long lasting until now, after 4 years. Today, millions of people will be touched when you remind them on the death of John Paul II.



You will never see any comment about the death of Michael Jackson from even a leader of the world or from any government. But this happened to John Paul II. Immediately after John Paul II's death, hundreds of world leaders (UN Secretary General, Presidents, Prime Ministers and Foreign Affair Ministries of all nations...) gave the deepest condolences to the Vatican and Catholic around the world.



Not only being Catholic Church Leader and President of a country (The Vatican City State - The Eternal City), but Pope John Paul II is also A Father, A Friend, A Brother, A Master and A Teacher of more than 1,3 billions Catholic around the world. He is the Idol of billions people of other religions or non-religion, too.



Michael Jackson is a super star of those who loves his music. Pope John Paul II is more than that. He's the Mega Super Star of all who want to find the truth, justice and love. John Paul II - The Man of God.



Absolutely, His death (The death of His Holiness John Paul II) made out the greatest funeral of all time. The Times voted the Death of the Pope (John Paul II) was the event of the year (2005). And we all will remember John Paul II ever and ever.



And you know? Just after the death of Pope John Paul II on 02nd April 2005, many countries around the world declared National Days of Mourning to remember John Paul II. A lot of nations declared National Days of Mourning in 6, 7 days, which never happens before for anyone's death in the world: Cuba (7 days), Poland (7 days), Philippines (7 days)...etc. The same with USA, France, UK, Germany...and so on. Many football clubs such as AC Milan, Inter Milan, AS Rome said that they couldn't play football in those days which the world lost a great leader.



And after all what I mention above, do you once again question yourself that: "Is the death of Michael Jackson bigger than Pope John Paul II's death ? Why an old Man was being paid respects by billions ?"



The answer is definitely clear: Pope John Paul II's death and funeral are absolutely the greatest ones while those of Michael Jackson in these days are just big ones (bigger than some other famous people).



Millions love Michael Jackson, but Billions love Pope John Paul II.



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Here is the list of dignitaries at the funeral of Pope John Paul II:



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dignitaries_at_the_funeral_of_Pope_John_Paul_II



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By: Peter Nguyễn Minh Trung



From Vietnam



...
2009-06-25 18:25:09 UTC
Perhaps only in America. For all intensive purposes, he IS our Pope! :)
Old Cath
2009-06-25 18:25:53 UTC
I don't believe so,

But if it is it shows this world is more screwed up than I thought.
Peter Nguyễn Minh Trung
2009-06-25 22:13:57 UTC
This is little a limping comparison. However, Pope John Paul II is beyond all comparison. The death of The Holy Father John Paul II is actually great great great and considered the largest funeral of all time.



As a matter of fact, Michael Jackson cannot create the huge wave news around the world by his death as Pope John Paul II did in April 02nd, 2005.



One day after Pope John Paul II's death Saturday at age 84, all the world see the whole greatest Man. John Paul II is the world traveler, the charismatic leader, the linguist, the athlete, the scholar, the defender of human dignity. The world remembers these aspects of John Paul II's life with great admiration, yet his legacy is a complicated one. He was at once orthodox and revolutionary, and his message was one that should disturb the comfort of everyone but a saint. John Paul II certainly revolutionized the papacy.



John Paul II's death attracted an unprecedented level of interest from the media and the population in general. The Global Language Monitor organization has the data to prove the great media interest.



As of the day of the Pope's death as well as the funeral, there had been 24 million Internet citations, and 200,000 stories around the world in the media. In comparison, for the entire preceding year there were only 56,000 news stories and 3.5 million Internet citations about John Paul II.



The coverage, noted Global Language Monitor, far exceeded attention given to other events such as the South Asian tsunami, the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and the deaths of Ronald Reagan and Princess Diana. Within the first 72 hours of the Pope's death there were about 10 times more news stores on John Paul II than were published in the same period on U.S. President George Bush following his re-election last November.



An analysis of the coverage shows that the word "historic" was associated with the Pope nearly 6 million times, while "conservative" is associated some 2.75 million times, and "loved" or "beloved" some 600,000 times.



Meanwhile, Catholic Internet sites saw a boom in use. Catholic sites recorded a 118% jump in market share of online visits for the week ending April 9, versus the randomly selected week ending Nov. 6 last year, according to the monitoring company Hitwise USA Incorporated. A report on the data was published Thursday by DM News.



The Pope's death also triggered an avalanche of Internet searches. For the week ending April 2, searches of the keywords "pope john paul" were up 3,161%, "pope" 2,801%, and "pope john paul ii" 2,307%.



The biggest beneficiary of the searches on the word “pope," at 11% of all searches, was the Vatican Web site (www.vatican.va). Followers-up, with 10% each, were www.catholic.net and the Google News page (www.news.google.com).



Newspaper coverage was also abundant. The British newspaper Independent noted some data regarding the press in the United Kingdom. According to an April 10 article, on the Monday following the Pope's death the Daily Mirror dedicated 19 pages to the issue, the Independent 13 pages, and the Times 11 pages. Other papers had similar levels of coverage, with exception of the Sun, which limited its coverage to just two pages.



The attention was notable, according to the Independent's analysis of the media coverage. Britain is not only a very secularized country, with little space given in the media to religion, but the traditional religion is Anglican.



In fact, Guardian journalist Martin Kettle commented in an April 5 article: "The funeral of a pope, let us be clear, has never until now been the sort of event deemed to require the attendance of the British prime minister - or even of the Archbishop of Canterbury."



Television coverage was also ample. The Associated Press on April 12 reported that more than 9 million people in the United States either wakened early or stayed up late to watch the Pope's funeral (it started at 4 a.m. on the East Coast and 1 a.m. on the West Coast).



Television channels in the Arab world also gave large amounts of air-time to the Pope. An Agence France-Presse report on April 3 noted that Qatar-based Al-Jazeera, famous for screening videotapes by Osama bin Laden, was among the first to announce the death of John Paul II.



In Lebanon, the Al-Manar satellite television of the Shiite fundamentalist movement Hezbollah interrupted its programs after the announcement of the Pope's death to broadcast live from the Vatican. Four other private Lebanese stations and the public Tele-Liban did the same.



On the Sunday following the Holy Father's death, Al-Jazeera continued providing widespread coverage, as did Dubai-based Al-Arabiya. These two stations, along with many others throughout the Arab world, also aired several documentaries about John Paul II.



Book sales were also affected by the Pope's death. An April 10 report by the Associated Press noted that in the subsequent days several titles quickly reached the top 20 of online booksellers such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble.



Leading titles include five by John Paul: "The Way to Christ"; "Memory and Identity"; "Pope John Paul: In My Own Words"; "Rise, Let Us Be on Our Way"; and "Crossing the Threshold of Hope."



Another popular book has been "Witness to Hope," a biography by George Weigel. Only hours after the Pope's death, HarperCollins announced that a new book by Weigel, not yet titled, would come out by year-end and "examine the death of the pope and the Catholic Church he left behind, while also offering an unparalleled inside account of the election of the next pope."



On Thursday the Associated Press reported from Italy that sales of John Paul II's last book, "Memory and Identity: Conversations Between Millenniums," have increased by 50%, to about 12,000 copies a day, since his death. The data came from the book's publisher, Rizzoli.



Analyzing the causes behind the multitude of pilgrims who came to Rome to pay homage to John Paul II, an article by Matthew Schofield in the Philadelphia Inquirer commented that even though many disagree with some Church teachings, the cultural roots of religion still go deep.



As well, the article cited Johannes Christian Koecke, of Germany's Konrad Adenauer Stiftung research center, who, commenting on John Paul II, said, "I think, in the end, he was feeding a latent desire in Europeans for the church and for belief." Europe has lacked orientation in recent years, added Koecke, and the Pope had given the continent what was lacking.



Schofield also cited Grace Davie, the director of the Center for European Studies at Exeter University in England. She said the reaction to the Pope's death "exposes the fragility of European secularism."



Davie doubted that the young people who flocked to see the Pope overlooked his religious message. "The most popular religious leaders in the world right now use the means of modernity to question the values of modernity," she said. "It's a very successful approach around the world, and he was very good at it."



And even the New York Times, in an article Thursday, had to admit the Pope's success with young people. "No matter who is chosen as the next pope, John Paul II has left behind a generation of committed young Roman Catholics who are already shaping the church in a more conservative mold than did their parents," the article observed.



The New York Times noted the increase in seminarians who are faithful to papal teachings, the youth groups that promote Eucharistic adoration and pray the rosary, and the interest by many in the theology of the body developed by John Paul II.



Youth evangelization, the article commented, was a priority of John Paul II, and this, combined with the growth of lay movements, has provided the Church with a new generation of enthusiastic believers. A gift left by John Paul II to whoever may be his successor.



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By: Peter Nguyễn Minh Trung



From Vietnam



...
Carmen
2009-06-25 18:27:01 UTC
pretty much
Suspension Notice
2009-06-25 18:26:57 UTC
seriously is he dead


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