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he'll pay for it in the next life
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View media item 171924I don't even know how i would act if something like this happened to my son or daughter or little cousin.
Te innocence of this country has been attacked, im not sure what the next move will be
All of the recent shooting tragedies have been bad, but this one is as low as it gets, and really hit me harder than any other one. The school is supposed to be a safe zone; it takes an absolutely sick bastard to do such a thing. 20 innocent children lost their lives and got robbed of their future.
I feel the solution to end situations like this takes a combination of gun control laws and better therapy of mentally ill people, and treating them while they're young. The most effective kind of therapy is incredibly expensive; it needs to be more accessible. It's a very difficult situation..there really is no one-size-fits-all solution.
the innocence of this country was attacked in '01 folk...
or go back farther to '41..
today was us killing ourselves.
I'm so saddened by this. and the shooting at the Excalibur... My people, what are we doing?!
The thing about the responsible Gun Owner thing is he could have STOLEN them then commited the crime before the owner knew.Drugs are not guns. You don't buy drugs to commit mass murders. How man drug dealers are going to really jump into the gun business? 1. They would not be as in demand as drugs. 2. They aren't as easy to move as drugs.
We really cannot stop the production of drugs, nor even slow it down. We can significantly decrease the production of guns.
I'd take my chances with these nuts trying to build pipe bombs than just being able to pull out a gun and start spraying.
That's just as bad imo. If you are a responsible gun owner you wouldn't let people have access to your guns. You don't deserve to own guns if you can't take care of them.
Lets say I have a cabinet of rifles and rarely takes them out which is not a uncommon thing.A guy I know takes two rifles without me knowing. Since I RARELY take them out except to clean it could be weeks before I know they are gone.
Nothing if that's what his pigeon brain can come up with.Why people going at rozay? What is he supposed o say?
Writeup on Lanza & his Family from the NYDN:
Link
If this kid has been known to be deeply disturbed or "off" for the better part of 15 years, I'm curious as to the efforts made in that timespan to reach out to him.
Gun control is going to be at the forefront, but I think we need to take a closer look at mental health above everything.
I look at it like this--this tragedy brings us as a country to a new low regarding gun violence. Columbine was an awful event, but it made "sense" in that it was disgruntled, disturbed high schoolers taking out their anger on their peers. Virginia Tech was another tragedy, but again, it made "sense" in that it was a loner, socially-awkward college student taking out his anger on the peers that he probably felt shunned or slighted by. And I use the word "sense" for lack of a better word--the violence of these events is indeed senseless in that it didn't have to happen. But when you look at them, there at least seems to be a connection between the shooter(s) and their victims.real talk fam. I hear about people dying and crime and stuff all the time, but this, today, it just really bothered me. Had me crying in my car on the way to the gym just thinking about all the families that lost love ones. All the children that'll never grow up. All the potential that was snatched. Future doctors, lawyers, world leaders, nurses, teachers. All that possibility. All those parents that outlived their children. Hurts me to my heart. I feel so bad for them, and there's not really anything you can say to the victims families, that is a pain that will never go away.All of the recent shooting tragedies have been bad, but this one is as low as it gets, and really hit me harder than any other one. The school is supposed to be a safe zone; it takes an absolutely sick bastard to do such a thing. 20 innocent children lost their lives and got robbed of their future.
I feel the solution to end situations like this takes a combination of gun control laws and better therapy of mentally ill people, and treating them while they're young. The most effective kind of therapy is incredibly expensive; it needs to be more accessible. It's a very difficult situation..there really is no one-size-fits-all solution.
he'll pay for it in the next life
I haven't read all the posts in this thread, and I know that not all the specifics of this massacre (can't believe I'm saying that) have been released. However, I will go out on a limb and say I don't believe this is JUST a GUN CONTROL issue. This is a Mental Health issue that SERIOUSLY needs to be addressed. A sane person does not kill 20 innocent children. Children who have their whole lives ahead of them, children who have done nothing wrong. Children who went to school to build Gingerbread Houses and read Christmas/Hannukah stories.