jlf1961
Posts: 14840
Joined: 6/10/2008 From: Somewhere Texas Status: offline
|
I just watched a true crime show called most evil. And it really got me to thinking (yes DA, we KNOW that is a dangerous thing.) Michael Stone forensic psychiatrist from Columbia University, has developed a scale rates murderers on a scale of evil that he has developed in order to help science understand homicidal behavior. Now, while it seems that every time something like Columbine or Virginia Tech comes up, people scream "GUN CONTROL." Now, I am going to ask a simple little question, where were the people that could have prevented these acts? I am not speaking of the police, I am speaking of the school and health professionals who should have seen the warning signs. Columbine, Virginia Tech and similar incidents are referred to as 'spree killings.' The person or persons committing these crimes has a history of anti-social behavior or nonsocial behavior. There are incidents involving rage outbursts in their personal history, and more often than not react in extreme manners to simple things. Take away the guns and you do not take away the potential for large numbers of people killed, you merely alter the methods used. Gun control has not stopped serial and spree killers in other countries, so why would anyone expect it to stop them here? The simple truth is that modern society is turning out these kind of people in droves. People segregate themselves by race, income, academic ability, 'beauty,' popularity and any number of factors that can and often does leave people out from an early age. With the human species being a social animal, why does it surprise us when someone cracks and begins taking lives after a lifetime of being an outcast? All too often the common response is, "It wasnt our fault he/she didnt want to join in." The truth is that it was our fault. We excluded these people. We deemed them non-entities, and we could care less what happened to them, until they snapped. This doesnt happen all the time, some people are naturally strong enough to brush aside the judgments of their peers. But when it does happen, people blame guns or the person who commits the act. Just think, that plain mousy person in your workplace, you know the one who just doesnt fit in, that never gets invited to go out with the guys or girls, may just be the next spree killer. kinda makes you want to make sure nobody is left out, dont it?
_____________________________
Boy, it sure would be nice if we had some grenades, don't you think? You cannot control who comes into your life, but you can control which airlock you throw them out of. Paranoid Paramilitary Gun Loving Conspiracy Theorist AND EQUAL OPPORTUNI
|