The Price of Platform Indifference

On 26 May 2026, a school minivan collided with a passenger train at a level-crossing in Buggenhout, Belgium, killing four occupants including two people with special needs. Reuters reported the incident from Brussels the same day. Within hours, the dead were being used as grist for grievances.
That response — tragedy as entertainment, grief as ammunition — is not new. It is the predictable output of an attention economy that rewards emotional extremity. Every time a migrant or foreign worker is implicated in a European accident, social media fractures into familiar camps: those who use it to self-congratulate about their own imagined moral superiority, and those who treat it as sport. Both responses collapse human beings into props for existing narratives. Neither processes the original event as a shared experience of fragility.
Why platforms produce this
The mechanism is structural, not incidental. Social media platforms are advertising businesses. Engagement — likes, shares, replies, watch-time — is the metric that converts attention into revenue. Content that provokes strong emotion performs better by design. Dehumanising language targeting out-groups reliably generates the kind of engagement that the underlying recommendation infrastructure amplifies.
Moderation is applied unevenly, not because individual moderators are indifferent but because policy boundaries are drawn around legal liability rather than social harm. Calling for violence against a named individual often violates platform terms. Calling a broad category of people animals, occupying a foreign country by definition, routinely does not — at least not until the threshold of an explicit slur or an explicit threat is crossed. The result is a wide middle ground where dehumanising rhetoric circulates without friction, creating the impression that callousness is the norm when in practice it is the product of specific content-design choices optimised for time-on-site.
The documented pattern
The concern is not merely aesthetic. Scholarship on what researchers call the dehumanisation-to-violence pathway documents a consistent relationship between sustained online rhetoric targeting a group as less-than-human, and real-world acts of aggression against members of that group. This does not mean every piece of dehumanising content directly causes a specific act of violence — that logic is neither empirically supported nor intellectually honest. It does mean that online environments which routinely permit language positioning an identifiable group as subhuman are creating conditions that elevate risk.
Platform responses to that risk remain commercially calibrated. Some platforms have added friction — warning labels, reduced distribution — to content that scores high on what their own internal classifiers flag as inflammatory. Others have expanded their definition of dangerous content following high-profile incidents. Yet advertising models that reward engagement have not been structurally reformed, and recommendation systems continue to surface conflict-generating material because conflict generates engagement.
What is actually at stake
The four people killed in Buggenhout were real. They were someone's students, neighbours, patients. The two with special needs who died had names, relationships, routines. Framing them as abstractions in service of a grievance — their deaths deployed as evidence in an argument they were not alive to make — is not a neutral act. It is a choice the platform ecosystem makes cheap.
The question of who bears the cost of that cheapness is not hypothetical. Migrant communities across Europe — people who arrived seeking work, safety, or family reunion — are routinely positioned in online discourse as a single undifferentiated threat to social order. When that rhetoric meets infrastructure failures, vehicle collisions, or any incident where a foreign-national driver or worker is present, the pattern of mutual dehumanisation is already primed. The incidents become confirmations rather than tragedies.
Regulatory frameworks exist but their enforcement remains inconsistent. The EU Digital Services Act places obligations on large platforms regarding systemic risk assessment, but the link between rhetoric and real-world harm is contested territory in both legal and empirical terms. Platforms themselves resist being held accountable for downstream effects they can credibly disclaim — and the architecture of disengagement makes that disclaimer plausible even when the evidence of harm is substantial.
Editorial note: Monexus published this piece the same day as the wire services, but chose to examine the documented online response alongside the incident rather than treating it as background noise.