cnn did report on it. google search for "nxivm site:cnn.com" returns 24 results.NXIVM should be a household name.
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Why wouldn't CNN report on it? Nobody can answer that, apart from maybe admitting that it's 'strange'.
alasdair
cnn did report on it. google search for "nxivm site:cnn.com" returns 24 results.NXIVM should be a household name.
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Why wouldn't CNN report on it? Nobody can answer that, apart from maybe admitting that it's 'strange'.
Indeedcnn did report on it. google search for "nxivm site:cnn.com" returns 24 results.
alasdair
JessFR, I don't mind complicated issues, but your point is well-taken.
Mental health issues are also obviously a factor. However, we have a government currently arguing whether young people should even have to buy catastrophic coverage, so the luxury of mental health care is not going to be accessible to everyone.
I don't think the impact of school shootings is captured solely by looking at total of students killed. There are a couple of things that are of concern. Obviously, the damage done to people who survive mass shootings is tremendous. The students and their families/loved ones are affected in a direct manner.
Also, mass school shootings shouldn't be normalized. Kids being killed, witnessing killings, and hiding from killers is not okay. It's not acceptable. Because of the media coverage, it's also creating an imprint on the national psyche. It's bigger than just an "insignificant" number of people because it's changed from the fascination with and sympathy for victims of the Columbine High School shooting to criticizing survivors of the Parkland shooting for speaking out. That's a huge cultural shift.
Maybe if there are enough corporate workplace shootings like at YouTube HQ, then gun regulation will be more urgent?
I love shooting and I don't want to have my gun ownership reviewed, but I have changed my mind about gun regulation after the Aurora shooting and the Mandalay Bay shooting.
If you have a mentally unstable person (how they got that way is a whole other thing), a gun that can fire at a rate more akin to fully automatic with ammunition, and a bunch of people that the armed wants to kill all together, the easiest component to remove at that point is either the gun or the shooter (in an immediate sense).
Hence the "armed teacher/guard" v the gun regulation argument. No one is really explaining that unpleasant part, but there it is.
And speaking of, and also speaking of things that won't happen. If the news hadn't constantly made a circus out of it, I bet that would have prevented a couple shootings. Way too late now, and they were never gonna and I don't believe in media censorship. But it's still kinda irresponsible.
other countries have mental health issues and nowhere near the level of gun violence of the u.s.I believe we need to address the mental health crisis in the US and a lot of the other problems will go away.
other countries have mental health issues and nowhere near the level of gun violence of the u.s.
i agree it's a complex problem.
alasdair
What type of comment is this??JGrimez, please chill out. If you want to post views held by certain kinds of people, you shouldn't be shocked if you're lumped in with them.
That's not a motive, that's nonsense. How does being an "alt-right conspiracy theorist" explain the motive for a rich gambler to open fire on a crowd of country music fans?SJ: interesting post on the Mandalay Bay/Las Vegas shooter being an alt-right conspiracy theorist. It's almost a relief though, to hear some kind of motive.
Even if what I said was false I didn't lie because it was a vague statement that could have been subjectively interpreted.maybe you did not intentionally lie but the idea that barely any media reported is nonsense.
Once again please re-read what I wrote, I was very specific with what I said.cnn did report on it. google search for "nxivm site:cnn.com" returns 24 results.
What did I lie about? Turns out that you are the liar.Indeed JG lies about what the media presents; this isn?t a first for him.
other countries have mental health issues and nowhere near the level of gun violence of the u.s.
i agree it's a complex problem.
Once again, you refuse to understand the claims, you misrepresent them, you group them together with nonsense, and then you insult and demonize a person you disagree with.If by alternative theory you mean that disgusting insanity that it's all staged. Then yes, that's conspiracy theorist crap.
Translation = "I cannot explain this"Saying nobody can otherwise explain it seems like a huge stretch. What's to explain, some young teenage males wind up feeling driven to be seen and remembered and noticed and hate their peers so they go on a rampage.
You don't see anything strange with deciding to grab a gun and go on a suicide mission murdering innocent people? That's psychopathic thinking, and I'm truly afraid if we've gotten to the point of normalizing homicidal violence. I hated school at times lots of kids hate school. Kids gets bullied all over the world. Important question: what makes the US different?Something my mother always says is how she's surprised high schools don't get burned to the ground more often. A lot of students truly hate school, I don't see anything strange about it.
Hey we agree on something.I do see something strange and sickening (but not unexplainable) about those nuts who think it's all stages. Fuck those people seriously. That's shit goes too far. Believe in whatever conspiracies you like but when you start sending letters to grieving parents telling them to stop lying about their not really dead but still dead children is the line for me where my patience entirely runs out.
I think people really overlook the tendency of high school age kids to chastise and ostracize their peers. When these shooting like Columbine and Santa Fe are performed by the students themselves, I think we know the true source - teenage bullying and angst. I never wanted to shoot up my peers but there were times my peers thought I might back in high school. In fact, they're assumption that I might be that crazy was my main defense against bullying. If they thought I might kill them, at least they left me alone.
I think people really overlook the tendency of high school age kids to chastise and ostracize their peers. When these shooting like Columbine and Santa Fe are performed by the students themselves, I think we know the true source - teenage bullying and angst. I never wanted to shoot up my peers but there were times my peers thought I might back in high school. In fact, they're assumption that I might be that crazy was my main defense against bullying. If they thought I might kill them, at least they left me alone.
Pretty sure the story about the Columbine shooters being ruthlessly bullied is a myth. Harris was a psychopath and Klebold was just straight up depressed. One had a fantasy about fucking shit up, the other was going along for the ride with the goal of ending his own life. But neither of them were the outcasts they were portrayed to be. I think there's pictures of Klebold in a crowded limo going to prom not too long before the events of 4/20. They weren't part of the Trenchcoat Mafia, either. And if they had wanted to target jocks, going to the library first thing probably wasn't the best idea.