12/6/2007 4:59:01 PM
12/6/2007 5:00:06 PM
well, maybe because it's not nearly on the scale of any of those events, and there's nothing "special" about it. look at those other events:Columbine - 14 dead, 23 injured. It was completely contained within a highschool, with all the victims being teenagers and teachers. Also, this was arguably the first mass-murder of this sort in the age of the internet and with 24-hour newsDC Sniper - 16 dead. This was a very spectacular and sensational event because it was just so surreal. It's like something out of a movie - a white van travelling on the interstate, taking people out one at a timeVT - 32 people dead. one of, if not the largest single person shooting event in the history of the US. Also, was completely contained on a campus, again meaning most/all of the victims were young peopleThis guy killed 8 people in a mall. Nothing to shrug-off, but there's no major sensational aspect of the story, at least not on the level of the other 3 examples. Also - this kind of thing really happens much more often that you would think. Malls seem to be a popular place for depressed, fucked up people to start unloading on other people at random. I can't think of any other specific cases, but it seems like this happens 1, 2 or 3 times a year around the US, with 3-6-8 people dying either in a mall or an office or a post office or whatever.
12/6/2007 5:03:48 PM
12/6/2007 5:11:38 PM
I'm going to point something else out that will make me extremely unpopular among some, but it is the truth. According to the CDC, in 2004, African Americans deaths due to firearms homicide was 6,271 people. That is 48% of all firearms homicide deaths and ~90% of those are black on black violence.If you remove black on black violence from the homicide numbers you're left with 6,548 firearms homicides in 2004. Removing the black population from the US population, to keep the comparison honest, you're looking at 6,548 firearms homicides for a ratio of 2.7 homicides per 100,000 people. Unfortunately that is still higher than most of the industrialized world, but it is significantly lower than the 4.2 per 100,000 when you include those numbers.Now, I am not saying that African Americans are intrinsically more violent due to racial characteristics, nor am I arguing that they should be prohibited from owning firearms. What I am saying is that the issue that goes beyond mere access to guns; there are cultural issues that have a tremendous effect on the decision to use a firearm and few intellectually honest people would deny that there are serious cultural issues going on within the “African American community” – at least as much as there is a monolithic black community. Switzerland has mandatory gun ownership but a firearms murder rate that hovers around 1 per 100,000. The four nations with the lowest homicide rates (Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Japan, Hong Kong) all have extremely harsh judicial systems.Something else that sets us apart, I think, is the American emphasis on individualism. This permeates every part of our society from consumer behavior, to environmentalism, to violence. In a self-centric society, this sort of acting out is going to happen, it is practically encouraged. Firearms do not cause this, although they greatly add to the lethality of those who chose to use them. They also add to the lethality of those who chose to defend themselves with them.
12/6/2007 5:42:39 PM
^ I wouldn't list individualism as a factor in spree shootings at this point. Very often the shooters mention themselves as contemporaries of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold or some other bullshit. They see themselves as part of that larger movement. I'm not saying that it's socially acceptable, but there certainly is a framework that shooters follow. People know that shooting a bunch of people and then offing yourself is the best way to go out with a bang and become national news. The kid could have gotten in the tub and opened up a vein if he were just suicidal. That's why the note says "Now I'll be famous."
12/6/2007 5:52:37 PM
They are like the suicide bombers of the US. instead of exploding themselves they just pick up a gun kill some people then kill themselves.
12/6/2007 5:59:15 PM
^^ I see what your saying, but I don't think emulation of a "role model" is evidence against individualism. Individuals can look to other individuals for inspiration without ceasing to act as an individual. I don't think that this is a "movement" so much as it is disaffected individuals acting out in a manner influenced by previous incidents.I wasn't referring to this specific incident either, the value we place on satisfying our own wants, as opposed to being members of society, breeds an unintentionally selfish attitude.A parallel would be our attitude towards energy conservation. When you ask us to give up SUVs and McMansions because it is a global problem and because we consume the plurality of the world's energy, we recoil at the notion . . . until gasoline starts to hurt our own wallet; then, we begin to get concerned.Let me be clear, I don't think Americans are bad people, and we are incredibly generous when others are in need, but we're also pretty damned self-absorbed. I have no empirical evidence for this, so feel free to prove me wrong.]
12/6/2007 6:02:19 PM
12/6/2007 7:04:46 PM
seriously. dude was upset cause he just got fired from McDonalds... Should have just gotten a buddy to phone his manager, say he was a cop, and demand the manager stick a broomstick up his ass.
12/6/2007 7:46:20 PM
and make $6.1 Million!!!
12/6/2007 7:53:11 PM
Nobody here has anything to say about the mind altering psychiatric drugs this dude was on? As long as we are looking for ways to not blame the primary person at fault ( the guy who shot people, duh.) we ought to also place much blame on the makers and distributors of these psychiatric drugs which seem to have the effect of encouraging a certain radical fringe go postal. This is not the first time.
12/6/2007 8:04:32 PM
^
12/7/2007 2:56:43 AM
Yes, the facts clearly show that the the drugs caused the shooting, not the underlying mental problem
12/8/2007 5:10:28 AM
sue micky d's
12/8/2007 9:55:32 AM
12/9/2007 12:10:23 AM
12/9/2007 12:45:39 AM
12/9/2007 4:10:37 PM
^I was expecting you to add another differentiator...Now they're guaranteed a solid week of 24 hour CNN, Fox News, etc. coverage.They were going to commit suicide anyway - now the can become infamous by taking out people beforehand.
12/9/2007 7:02:34 PM
Interesting comparasion between the Mall shooting and the Colorado shootings.In the second case, the shooter made an erroneous assumption that churches are gun-free zones. He arrived with a bunch of ammuntion and weapons--enough to kill dozens of people. But the church-folks weren't gonna just lay down for this nut.Some were distracting him, playing for time. And then a woman charged him with her handgun and stopped his killing spree pretty fast. Quite different outcome from the Shopping Mall and Virginia tech which both forbade guns on their property. The bad guys will always get guns... we just have to make sure that the good guys can have them too.
12/11/2007 2:21:34 AM