The fact they don't explicitly say who did it, or who they think did it, or whom the "troubling news from Syria" say did it, makes me think they still want to somehow implicate the government - which makes this a despicable attempt to politicise this man's alleged death.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/08/bassel-khartabil-missi...
Two, moral appeals generally don't work. The western style of protest has become mere gesture: 'I would like for this to change, but will not interfere with the outcome in any way.' We are bombarded with moral appeals on a daily basis, and while signaling our agreement or support online can sometimes yield enough traffic for a commercial or voluntary activity, it has a pretty dismal record in bringing about political change.
Agreed. It seems as though no one who's relatively comfortable is willing to put any skin in the game (literally). We're sitting around with our thumbs up our collective arses wearing stickers of our preferred social justice brand while wondering why the world is hurtling more and more towards a dystopia-enthusiast's wet dream. It's too bad signalling our morals to everyone achieves jack shit.