I touched on this in a earlier thread. When you die, unless you are famous for something that shall make it into the history books, after a few generations, you are forgotten. It is like you never existed at all. Your grandkids will know who you are, your great grand children may be some odd chance, but it is a given, that unless you are famous for something, that your great-great-grandchildren won\'t have a clue on who you are. That is just the way it goes. And Joyda is right, people die everyday. When Dale Earnhart died, it was made a big deal, yet alot of thousands of people die every day. Why was it special that he died ? Because he was famous. That is the difference, fame carries you on after death. Otherwise, you are just a stat.
But, there is no "fate". What happens is up to you. There is circumstances and situations that will make it difficult, but if you truly want to do something you will. Relying on "fate" will only slow you down and make you work less, thus never reaching your goal. And while you may not be famous one day, or not in the history books, you can still affect alot of peoples lives and they will remember you. And in the end, that is what matters.
Despite, these cold facts of life, it doesn\'t hurt to show some respect for those that you do know died. It is impossible to respect everyone who dies, or even acknowledge every death in the world. But, those who do die, should be noted and noticed, for the mere fact they was a human and they are gone now. They had a family and the family lost someone very special to them. Not to mention, if you enjoyed anything Sega produced, he had something to do with that. He was the CEO of Sega. I personally enjoy what Sega has put out, and he was CEO since I can remember, so I respect what he done with the company (despite some bad choices). It is a sad for the industry and most importantly, it is sad for anyone who he affected in any manner.
R.I.P
I can\'t remember who said this, but the quote always stuck in my head. It seems to fit the idea of most people. We as people always put those who are famous ahead of the little people, it seems...
""The death of one is a tragedy, the death of millions is just a statistic.""