I was committed to not going online this week (what with dh's vacation time and all). But, alas, in the name of curiosity over this awful tragedy I am on this evening....
What a horrible, awful, evil thing to have happen! I agree that it appears at this point that the murderer had very deepseated "issues" - if not outright mental illness. His writings are....disturbing to say the least.
I have two thoughts on this mass murder:
1)I am so thankful to live in a country where the worst murder to ever happen involved only 33 people. I have had so many family and friends who were immigrants (from places as farflung as Mexico, the Domican Republic, the Philippines, the Soviet Union - when it existed) relate to me how safe the United States is. And, I would have immigrant friends living in the inner city in Boston (ie NOT what I would consider exactly 'safe') relate such sentiments to me! I feel profoundly blessed to live in a nation where my life is so peaceful and safe considering the circumstances of so very many in this world. And, it IS deeply disturbing when some of that evil invades into our lives in this way.
2)If one person had had a concealed carry permit with a firearm this mass murderer could have been stopped. All it would have taken was ONE person. As it was nobody could stop this apparently insane man. I remember the worst mass murder up until this point in the United States. It happened in the early 90's in Killeen, Texas (ironically the city next to one of the biggest Army bases). A lone gunman walked into a Luby's cafeteria and killed over 20 people. How did Texans react? They logically realized that if ONE person in that cafeteria had been armed this person could have been prevented from killing so many innocents. All it took was ONE person to stop this bloodbath. And, now, today in Texas we have concealed carry laws (and, a corresponding drop in gun-related murders and crime). All it takes is ONE person to stop an evil person intent on harming others.
What a horrible, awful, evil thing to have happen! I agree that it appears at this point that the murderer had very deepseated "issues" - if not outright mental illness. His writings are....disturbing to say the least.
I have two thoughts on this mass murder:
1)I am so thankful to live in a country where the worst murder to ever happen involved only 33 people. I have had so many family and friends who were immigrants (from places as farflung as Mexico, the Domican Republic, the Philippines, the Soviet Union - when it existed) relate to me how safe the United States is. And, I would have immigrant friends living in the inner city in Boston (ie NOT what I would consider exactly 'safe') relate such sentiments to me! I feel profoundly blessed to live in a nation where my life is so peaceful and safe considering the circumstances of so very many in this world. And, it IS deeply disturbing when some of that evil invades into our lives in this way.
2)If one person had had a concealed carry permit with a firearm this mass murderer could have been stopped. All it would have taken was ONE person. As it was nobody could stop this apparently insane man. I remember the worst mass murder up until this point in the United States. It happened in the early 90's in Killeen, Texas (ironically the city next to one of the biggest Army bases). A lone gunman walked into a Luby's cafeteria and killed over 20 people. How did Texans react? They logically realized that if ONE person in that cafeteria had been armed this person could have been prevented from killing so many innocents. All it took was ONE person to stop this bloodbath. And, now, today in Texas we have concealed carry laws (and, a corresponding drop in gun-related murders and crime). All it takes is ONE person to stop an evil person intent on harming others.
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