It's a phenomena I've lived with a long time.
When people talk about the IRA in the UK, where people come from matters.
If you are from NI your story and what you remember is different from those who live in England. All the bombs in NI get forgotten by the English. If you are a Londoner it's typical to speak of Canary Wharf.
When I speak of being caught up in a bombing as a child, people immediately start talking about the Arndale bombing of Manchester, in which no one was killed. They always forget Warrington which was 3 years earlier, killed two children and had a particular significance to the peace process.
Now if you talked about the Manchester bombing it would be the Arianna Grande gig...
When you talk to an American about terrorism they forget the IRA which had widespread support within New York and start talking about 9/11.
So the idea of provincial Nice being forgotten especially since it followed Paris isn't really a new or novel thing.
At the time, people in the uk posted tricolor flags on their Facebook and said trite things about not forgetting.
I think that's the worst for me. You see it all unravelling and hear the platitudes and you know its only a matter of time before they move on and it's only those caught up in events and their fallout who remember and then that fades with the passage of time.
Over and over again.
And that's where the hopelessness and sense of the past repeating and forgotten stories replaying for a new generation's horror when it all kicks off again.
Nice? Remember Bali? Bali? Remember Christchurch? Christchurch? Remember Barcelona?