sam_gordon
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2010
- Messages
- 27,701
Feel free to PM me. I'd like to hear some practical ideas.I have ideas, but I'm not allowed to post most on here as it involves politics and politicians.
Feel free to PM me. I'd like to hear some practical ideas.I have ideas, but I'm not allowed to post most on here as it involves politics and politicians.
Saw this on Megyn Kelly and thought it was interesting...
Mental illness is also a factor, obviously. But why? What societal pressures are causing an apparent rise in mental health issues? I'm sure there is no easy answer there either, but let's not ignore it.
So how do we make them pay attention?
What change can we enact?
Perhaps yes to either of these. Being negligent may deserve a trip to jail. Foster care seems like a better alternative than turning into a mass murderer.
Exactly, so in reality it doesn't prevent anything.
If anything, it would just accelerate the incident.
The constitution can be changed. It has 27 times, in fact.
I whole heartedly agree with this. But this case is hard because both of the killer’s parents are deceased, I think the mother died last year. It looks like this guy fell through the cracks. It is easy to see that he had very little support or someone monitoring him.Or parents can start paying more attention to their whack job kids instead of just saying he's "different." I personally think it starts at home with these young school shooters.
Who says uprooting the child and placing them in a foster care situation makes them less likely to be angry and commit these types of atrocities? I would argue that it would add "fuel to the fire". Are there enough foster homes for this to even occur?
And then we have adults like this:
http://uproxx.com/news/football-coa...tudents-florida-school-shooting-nikolas-cruz/
How many parents are waking up with their children still alive because of his brave sacrifice?
Me too. I cried (still am actually) when I read it. Thank God for him.I couldn't bring myself to "like" your post, but had to thank you for finding it. It brought tears to my eyes, and I agree he was a true hero.
Or parents can start paying more attention to their whack job kids instead of just saying he's "different." I personally think it starts at home with these young school shooters.
I don't think anyone would disagree with that.
There are things that render you ineligible for owning firearms, there is no reason why there can't be things that take away that right if you do them after you legally purchase one. I should say there is no reason why some things can't be added to that already.
I also somewhat agree that the people closest to the person should be held somewhat responsible IF they knew something. A little while back I read the book of the mother of one of the Columbine shooters, and from what she wrote, she was very involved in her son's life. I realize it's only her side of the story, but by all accounts they were very involved in their son's life, and he still was able to do what he did.
I don't know what the answers are. I do think schools should have armed guards as a start.
One of the things I find particularly unsettling about this case is the fact that it was openly known to so many people in positions of authority and those in positions to understand this shooter's personal circumstances that there were problems and warning signs here on so many levels, yet no one truly intervened until it's too late for too many. The FBI and law enforcement had information pertaining to the report made about the social media comments. The school system had awareness of severe issues AND would have had details regarding his family circumstances. Family members knew he had lost his only surviving parent and seemingly didn't reach out.
It's conceivable that just one person deciding to dig in and respond a bit differently to whatever it was they were aware of might have made a world of difference.