Omaha Mall Shooting

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AuthorTopic: Omaha Mall Shooting
Agent
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These incidents seem to happen more often.

...

No, Drew and Aran aren't crazy, the thread had a different name before.

[ Thursday, December 06, 2007 19:59: Message edited by: Excalibur ]

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A Bile Crux
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I'm tried of people using these events to try put down America. It comes across as very arrogant acting as if your country doesn't have its own problems. The only reason America seems to have more problems is because America is considered the most powerful (note I didn't say best)and therefore America's problems get more media coverage then most other nations do.

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I'll bet he listened to death metal, too. :rolleyes:

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? Man, ? Amazing
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quote:
Originally written by Excalibur:

It should be noted that incidents like this rarely occur outside of the U.S.
Why? It's not particularly important to the story or the victims, so what is your personal agenda and why do you chose to use this as a platform? I personally don't believe that you have any proof for your statement, nor do I believe that you could find it. Random acts of violence occur everywhere on the planet. You may think that means matter, or locations, but the only thing that matters is that 8 people died because one young man went a little off in the head. In short, your statement has been deemed offensive, and is one that is rarely made outside the U.S.

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Thralni - "a lot of people are ... too weird to be trusted"
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quote:
Originally written by Excalibur:

These incidents seem to happen more often.

It should be noted that incidents like this rarely occur outside of the U.S.

Oh, my dear friend, I don't think you know what has happened in the past two months in Holland, do you? Of four or five families either the father or the mother got crazy and killed off their entire family (children, wife/husband) before commiting suicide.

Every time I think about it, it makes me sick. What also makes me sick, is that you say that such incidents happen most in the US.

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A couple of weeks ago, a school shooting could be prevented in my country, because the two who planned it talked about it on the internet, and friends got scared and called the police. One of the boys shot himself when they came for him, the other said that they wouldn't have done it. But armour and munition were found in their rooms, so how can you be sure.

And today, in a small village in the north, a mother of five killed all her kids.

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The Malaysians even invented a word for the act of attacking random people with murderous intent. If you think that spree killing is a new problem, or one confined to America, you don't know much about it.

[ Thursday, December 06, 2007 05:10: Message edited by: Thuryl ]

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spree_killer

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By Committee
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Looks like someone's discovered "Bowling for Columbine." Seriously though, Excalibur, your post is dripping with inferential the-nation-isn't-Christian-enough-osity, and to that I say, TSST! Furthermore, this discussion has already been held, and you were even a part of it, technically. Don't beat a dead horse!

[ Thursday, December 06, 2007 10:18: Message edited by: Drew ]
Posts: 2242 | Registered: Saturday, April 10 2004 07:00
Law Bringer
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I find it very ironic to say that, in this day and age, the United States are not Christian... enough.

I mean, for a country whose constitution expressly forbids its laws to endorse any religion (but apparently that doesn't extend to abortions and homosexuals, because it's a completely non-religious fact that those are icky), your fundies are pretty loud.

Edit: Especially online. Hey wait.

[ Thursday, December 06, 2007 14:52: Message edited by: Arancaytar ]

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Hey!

We love our fundies.

And by "we" I mean comedians.

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Agent
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Woe! I misread an article, it said that shooting incidents in schools were rare outside of the U.S. I'm sorry you were offended, but you don't have to be so hyped up about it.

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

[ Thursday, December 06, 2007 16:37: Message edited by: Excalibur ]

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A Bile Crux
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I still don't see how that affects anything. Although, I suppose you could use this to rant about how screwed up modern American culture is... and you might have some good points, too. However, you would most likely accomplish nothing. In fact, I recommend not ranting about it.

Yes, these things are terrible. When I lived in Lancaster, PA last year, a local Amish school was attacked (I believe it made national news). My boss was a friend of the killer's wife, and my church paid for the killer's funeral. It was very close to home. And guess what? The first thing the Amish did was prepare meals for the man's family. Nobody ranted about how American culture destroyed him. Nobody moralized about the evils of whatever. The Amish showed true Christian forgiveness, and the murderer's poor family will never stop thanking them for it.

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"Standing on the rooftops, Everybody scream your heart out."
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Agent
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The Amish are good individuals, and they express wisdom by refusing to accept modern technology. Actually, I'm not sure if they're entirely void of it, but anyways.

I don't understand how a ceased relationship and lost employment would drive a man to inflict chaos in a shopping mall. Ok, so these people wish to commit suicide, but why cause destruction along with it?

Yeah, I've said a few egregious things before. Why don't you just forget about it? It's true I'm a bit stubborn, and only once have I apologized and discarded something.

I'm still shocked, I misread an article and everyone's in an uproar. :o

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A Bile Crux
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quote:
Originally written by Excalibur:

I don't understand how a ceased relationship and lost employment would drive a man to inflict chaos in a shopping mall. Ok, so these people wish to commit suicide, but why cause destruction along with it?
Well, in depressed people that's enough to drive them to suicide. The destruction he caused was for a simple reason, most likely: He wanted people to remember him.

I myself have done much thought on the subject. Most of us, unless we have done something particularily noteworthy, will be forgotten in two generations, roughly. Children (if we have them) and friends will, of course, remember us. Then, grandchildren will either have there parents tales to know of us, or a few childhood memories of us. If we aren't senile old bats when we are with grandchildren, they may tell of us to their children, but generally it will end with the second generation.

Now, back to the original point. This man didn't want to be forgotten as just another victim in the battlefield of suicide and depression. So, he did a vile act that he knew would reach the media. He became known briefly by some of this ~300 million population of Statesmen. Nothing extraordinarily noteworthy, not like Virginia Tech. His goal of ending himself was accomplished, but not his goal of being remembered in the long term. Thankfully.

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Agent
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Hmmm...Judging by the assumption that depressed people usually have a low self-esteem, I find little sense in wishing to be remembered. There must be something deeper than simple remembrance.

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A Bile Crux
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I heard that he was on anti-depressants, some of which have been linked to behavior like this. But I could be mistaken.

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I have my own complaints but suicide, especially of this variety, won't solve them...

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I find it hard to understand how this thread could have gotten even worse in the past 6 hours.

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Thralni - "a lot of people are ... too weird to be trusted"
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Electric Sheep One
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When I was very young my family lived for a year in a country that suffered various terror attacks. Years later my dad told me about the policy there at that time: the incident would be reported in the media, but no information about the perpetrators was ever provided. They were simply referred to as 'terrorists', and no public speculation about their affiliation or cause was permitted.

I think there is a lot of sense in this, and I think it applies even more strongly to spree and serial killers. They should not be named, and nothing about them should be reported. 'A sicko shot some people' would be enough.

Every depressed guy with an ammo crate should know that that would be all the epitaph he would get by going on rampage. Taking away the incentive of posthumous notoriety outweighs any legitimate right the public has to satisfy idle morbid curiosity.

And there is nothing to be gained, anyway, by learning more about a mass murderer, whatever their motivations. Investigating why they did it makes as much sense as interviewing a tumor. Nothing that could possibly turn up from investigation could be adequate explanation, let alone justification. It would still amount, in the end, to 'a sicko shot some people'. We should just leave it at that.

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I know this is a little off the issue, but I’m curious about what you mean by this:

quote:
Originally written by Arancaytar:

for a country whose constitution expressly forbids its laws to endorse any religion (but apparently that doesn't extend to abortions and homosexuals…
I think there are religious people in the US who fall on either side of these issues. Abortion is legal and I’m pretty sure homosexuality laws are off the books or at least unenforced in all 50 states. If the US has laws that endorse religion I’m unaware of them. I think the government is pretty secular. What are you saying?
Posts: 701 | Registered: Thursday, November 30 2006 08:00
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quote:
Originally written by Stillness:

...I think the government is pretty secular. What are you saying?
:eek:

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Homosexual acts may not be illegal, but homosexuals and other queer people aren't given all the rights and privileges of straights. So clearly the government does have an opinion on sexuality, and it's one that happens to coincide with a more conservative Protestant opinion.

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Shaper
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quote:
Originally written by Arancaytar:

the United States are
Interesting. You can tell Aran is from another country. Here, your average American would say "the United States is" We actually had a Civil War over this very subject. The winners were the people who said "is."

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quote:
Originally written by Elastikon:

homosexuals and other queer people aren't given all the rights and privileges of straights.
I think they are. The only thing I can think of is military restrictions on sharing your sexuality, but not on practicing it. But in general, discrimination based on sexuality is illegal here.

By the way, a sentiment of anti-homosexuality is far from being the sole property of conservative Protestants. I think it's safe to say it's ubiquitous the world over.
Posts: 701 | Registered: Thursday, November 30 2006 08:00

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