Editors collected comments from netizens about this time's gun shooting
incident in Virginia Tech, US.
You can post comments on Gunman
kills 32 in US campus shooting
Gun culture
Look at the factors 2007-04-17 08:07
1. Easy access to guns by the gunman who WAS a totally law-abiding person
PRIOR to his shooting rampage.
2. Tendency for some people to resort to violence and use guns to
UNILATERALLY solve their problem or to eliminate their problem, real or
unreal.
Americans' obsession with the rights to bear arms and their daily exposures
to gun violence on TV and in
Hollywood movies
have desensitized their minds and confused their judgment. It is a two-way
street between the human mind and the violence in the entertainment media, and
don't ever let the head shrinkers tell you otherwise.
HawkEyes 2007-04-17 09:46
Imagine yourself coming into the classroom, the school cafeteria, the
library, everyone is wearing a gun belt with guns and bullets. A drop of a book,
a cup, a sneeze can get some nervous wreck or want-to-be-heroes draw their
guns.
That today's citizen¡¯s rights to bear arm has no resemblance to what
Americans' forefathers had in mind when they drew up the constitution. The
innocent victims of this carnage are the price Americans will continue to
apparently willing to pay for this right.
Janet Liew 2007-04-17 11:47
Just don't understand why the American are so trigger-happy, especially on
the campus.Imagine, the killing of 32 innocent victims on such a rampage.It is
about time that the
U.S.
government should restrict the
sale of firearms before more innocent lives are lost through random shooting. I
condemn the American system!
Concerned 2007-04-17 14:05
This is obviously NOT easy as there are over 230 million guns and assault
rifles in civilian hands in America .
But for a start pass legislations and declare a moratorium on gun ownership
and close all gunsmiths and STRICTLY control the sale of BULLETS. Without
bullets the guns and assault rifles are useless.
Next make it illegal to own guns and assault rifles and those who voluntarily
hand them in get paid and the guns are melted down. Trace the registered owners
of guns who have not handed in the guns in and conficate them.
Ban the imports of guns and assault rifles too.
It's true this may cause the criminals to be the only people with guns but
let the police do their jobs like in other countries and bring them to book.
Bring in Elliot Ness!!
BUT the priority is step up SECURITY in schools and colleges and universities
to STOP all weapons at the gates!
more concerned 2007-04-17 22:56
If the sales of firearms were banned and the penalty for private possession
high enough, it would be much more difficult to buy these illegally.
It is very simple-minded to think
America
would be safer if everyone
were allowed to carry guns.
A person armed with a or several guns can shoot down many others before he
can be stopped. An unarmed person will have difficulty to kill son many persons
in a short time and from a long distance.He can also be stopped by others even
without guns. Moreover, a person without gun will probably be too coward to
start such an attempt at all.
Imagine that everyone in the Virginia TECH have a gun, as suggested by one of
the posters. The murder would still be able to shoot down dozens by firing first
and from a hidden place. What would happen if everyone suspect the other to be
the murder and start opening fire at each other? The number of deads would be
much higher.
Many Americans have attempted to stop the sales and the private possession of
firearms, but they have no chance at all against the powerful lobbyists of the
firearms producers and the numerous John Waynes and Rambos.
Former president J.F. Kennedy and his brother Robert have tried. Both were
assassinated
School management
Camille 2007-04-17 08:15
Once again, image is everything. The decision of the school president to
downplay the seriousness of the situation caused more lives, needlessly. He
stated that they "did not know" at the time, the extent of the rampage. So, if
one is killed let all continue as if nothing has happened - only when the
bloodbath began in earnest, was a feeble attempt made to notify the population
at large. This is reprehensible thinking, abhorrent, dollar driven and
immoral.
Go China 2007-04-17 08:59
I agree with Camille. The school president did not correctly handle this
incident.
The first time the two victims were killed, the school police should have had
a manhunt and a lock down. Instead, they procrastinated for two hours.
Schools and universities are halls of learning not a battle field.
It is easy to set up a magnetometer to screen for guns at the gate like they
do at airports. Just like no passenger is allowed to carry guns into a passenger
aircraft, no student should be allowed to bring guns to schools or colleges or
universities.
The level of security checks at these institutions of higher learning should
be reviewed before more students are needlessly killed.
It is madness in
America
to allow students to carry
guns and other concealed weapons to classes.
Students' problem
My take on the shooting is simple. Cho did not receive an A+ for his course
work. This grading thing means so much to Asians. When they come out of school
upon graduation, grades mean nothing. What is important is innovation. And is
what is lacking. Studying in a school environment is one thing, but putting it
together without getting graded for it is another.
More than one employer has said to me, yes they get good grades, they study
for test. But I want innovators, people that can think on their feet. Not some
bureaucrat that can only function with rules before him.
The test and grades me so much that many Asian kids do not play, or even
speak to others when they are in U.S.
They become loners, afraid to open their months, studying for testing night
and day seven days per week.
That produces the lame brains at the bank offices, who cannot make a simple
decision without seeking authority.
Kuan 2007-04-18 06:35
Virginia Tech and other US schools need to do research on why students go
crazy like this.
I read that a lot of
US
school
killers were using anti-depressant drugs. I think drugging our children to solve
depression is a bad idea. Drugged up people are crazy.
People are depressed for many reasons: (1) poor social skills so the person
is ostracized (people are social animals, ostracized people go crazy), (2) too
much school pressure, (3) genetic disposition that causes chemical imbalance,
(4) trauma to head, (5) traumatic experience, (6) etc.
Drugging depressed people just hides the problem, but does not HEAL the
problem. Because the problem is not healed, depressed people just get worse and
worse. Then they get more anti-depressant drugs. The person just gets more
drugged up, until he or she "explodes" due to medication madness.
Opinions concerning other aspects
To Concerned 2007-04-17 13:21
Bringing guns into a school is obviously banned. I can't think of anywhere in
the world where such a thing would be allowed.
BUT, If you plan on going on a suicidal rampage, you aren't going to pay any
attention to the rules now are you?
Just like suicide is illegal, but what difference will that make to someone
who wants to kill themselves.
There is actually very little you can do to prevent murder, if the
perpetrator has no concern for the consequences. Short of a mind-reading device
we can only assume most people will not break the social contract and take
common sense precautions regarding our surroundings and behavior.
If someone wants to kill you, and you don't know it ahead of time then the
chances are they will succeed, regardless of rules and laws.
Kuan 2007-04-17 13:45
According to internet sources I quickly looked up,
China is a safer place than
America,
India, most of Southeast Asia, most of Latin
America, most of the Middle East, most of Africa,
Russia
, and so
forth.
China is transforming rapidly, and fast changes result in chaos.
Still these internet sources say China is safe by any measure.
Look it up for yourself. I personally feel that crime is rare in
China when compared to most nations. Then when you consider how
China is poor and developing
so rapidly, I am amazed that China is not more violent.
Still, I have read reports from other Chinese news that lots of Chinese
students feel a lot of pressure and suffer many ailments at school. These
problems come from many types of sources. The students feel that school and
society is not doing enough to help them solve their problems.
The news report says that most Chinese students just "tough things out" or
eventually solve their problems. However, the news reports says a better and
faster solution is providing Chinese students and school administrators with
more means to speak to each other, work with each other, and have access to
psychological advice.
Maybe a "psychologically weak" person or a very impulsive person mixed with
weapons turns a troubled student into a murderous student. Maybe this is what
happened in Virginia Tech.
thetruth 2007-04-17 23:00
In this difficult time for the
United States
, it is perhaps well to
ask what kind of a nation we are and what direction we want to move in. For
those of you who are Americans like me (and I am an Asian American who love both
my American and Asian heritage)- considering the evidence there evidently is
that there was an Asian man who was responsible - you can be filled with
bitterness, with hatred, and desire for revenge. We can move in that direction
as a country, in great polarization - American people against Asian people,
filled with hatred toward one another.
Or we can make an effort to understand and to comprehend, and to replace that
violence, that stain of bloodshed, with an effort to understand with compassion
and love. We have to make an effort in the
United States
to understand, to go beyond these rather
difficult times.
What what we need in the world is not hatred; what we need in the world is
not violence or lawlessness, but love and wisdom and compassion toward one
another, and a feeling of injustice towards those who still suffer within our
world, whether they be Americans or they be Asians...
We've had difficult times in the past. We will have difficult times in the
future. It is not the end of violence; it is not the end of lawlessness; it is
not the end of disorder.
But the vast majority of American people and the vast majority of Asian
people in this world want to live good, decent lives, and many respect each
other, and want justice for all human beings who abide in our world. Let us
dedicate ourselves to what the Greeks wrote so many years ago: to tame the
savageness of man and to make gentle the life of this world.
Let us dedicate ourselves to that, and say a prayer for our country, our
people, and our world. Let the words of Bobby Kennedy ring true and apply to
this situation. Let us end the words of hatred in this board.
You can also comment onVa.
gunman writings raised concerns
sam 2007-04-18 06:54
thank goodness sanity regained control of these comments. closer ties between
the us and asian countries should be a us concern . the us has had a long and
respected relationship with the countries of
asia and its people. the asian realm has a rich and
wonderful history and any nation can learn the value of society by studying its
history. the countries have a history of not feeling the need for colonialism
and conques but peace and wisdom. all countries learn with time and the us is no
better but we harbor no hatred or anyone that does not threaten our security,
which i might add is true of any country. if we are to decay from within so be
it. but as a whole we do not see this as a reason to blame any country as a
whole. please do not spout hatred from a country where wisdom and understanding
are believed to be in control.
Don't blame all 2007-04-18 08:38
You can't hold a race of people responsible for one man's action, I think
most
US
citizens understand this. As for gun control/ownership in the
US
, it's both a privilege and a responsibility, some people do not
understand this concept. Some people will always abuse their responsibilities to
act appropriately. For every 1 person that cannot show restraint there are a
1000 that do each and everyday. Guns don't kill people, people kill people.
abc 2007-04-18 10:05
Its pretty easy to blame, but if look at US history. This kind of incident
happens alot and it involve no just 1 nationality its being deing done by
whites, blacks, indians, oreintals. It happens every year in the
US and it can be any nationalities.
Only racists and weak minded ppl will blame it on race.
This is also part of the disadvantages of allowing the citizens to carry
guns. Ppl just need to deal with it.
WendyLiu 2007-04-18 10:46
The whold world is sorry about Virginia Tech compus gun shooting incident.
The
US
government should properly manage the gun
control/ownership. If the guns are banned for civil, what the shooter can use as
a weapon?
And after the tragedy happened, there are some Americans didn't make clear
about the whole thing, just blamed the Chinese, now really owe them a big
apology.
One thing can't understand, why does the gun shooting incident happened again
and again on American campus, what's wrong with them?
Here are some comments from the forum and you can post
your opinions on Over
30 Virginia Tech students reported dead in university
shooting
Should U.S. control its weapon's
management?
cyberspook 2007-4-17 04:28
here we go again another knee jerk
reaction for gun control coming up , in the UK and australia we have some of the
strongest gun laws in the world , all brought about by a knee jerk reaction to
the port arthur shootings, 10 years down the track and the figures are in ,
despite the strong gun controls and the gun buy back scheme gun crime has risen
46% , they have just realised that the majority of firearms used in unlawfull
acts are not registered therefore are outside the strong gun control measures ,
so what's the answer to stop these kind's of crimes from happening , in a
nutshell you will never be able to stop someone who has had a mental break from
doing this kind of thing , I wish there was a solution but other than giving
every one a gun to protect themselves there is nothing that can be done my heart
felt condolances go out to the family's of those involved.
irishinuk 2007-4-17 04:41
SA has the same problem
When are governments
going to realize that gun control just takes guns out of the hands of the
law-abiding, since criminals will buy them on the black market?!
ANC decided
to introduce gun control a few years back... idiots didn't realize that most
guns used in house break-ins, hijackings, and farm murders are pilfered from the
South African Defence Force's own supplies and sold on the black market..
changabula 2007-4-17 08:37
Was nothing learned from the 19 shootings in
the last 10 years? Why was the security non-existent?
The weapons used and
the issue of gun law and control seems of little relevance at this moment.
Ultimately its people that are the problem. It is sad that there are people with
severe psychological issues that need help. Maybe the real problem that needs to
be fixed is noticing suicidal or homicidal tendencies in people.
myfriend 2007-4-17 10:58
In America, they are UNwilling to outlaw the sale
of guns because the gun lobby bribe congressmen (and congresswomen).
Easy
possession of guns, and a bad role model of Washington waging wars around the
world, these two combined have made Americans young and old very prone to shoot.
holidays 2007-4-17 11:16
My patience has been running thin on your
compliments and questions. I admit I don't have enough years on me as yours
about America and that matter on the world. That's why I don't comment on your
point of view. But that doesn't mean I don't entitle a voice! I never bought a
gun, some of my friends bought a few.
I have to admit I like target
shootings. I did my part of shooting water gun on people.
But I will never
never ever own a gun. Because I know once I put my hand on a gun in a hostile
situation, I'd better prepare to shoot and kill. Owning a gun makes killing as
easy as that.
We encounter stressful, hostile situation often in life. By not
owning a gun, killing becomes a more difficult option. By not owning a weapon,
reconsiliation comes easier than enpowing over others.
When you aware of your
power to kill, you will kill!
I live in USA and I like where I live. But that
doesn't mean I like everything about USA. Maybe I am putting my opinion in a
wrong place since it is a Chinese forum. Maybe the Chinese can learn something
from the mistakes of America has made.
mengzhi 2007-4-17 09:30
Tragedies waiting to happen, and again.
Thank
you emu for your support in the aftermath of this tragedy. We are still vague on
details and no blame should be slotted to anyone until then. Two things are
certain :
#1. The freely availability of guns and firearms in the States. I
know, I know the old hoary chestnut argument that " guns don't kill, only people
kill ". People with knives would have killed many less lives. The responsible
hobby shooters are not the problem, it is the crooks and mentally deranged or
just depressed. It is your country and it is your call. From afar, the cause and
effect is so stark one shudders to see that Americans are missing the wood for
the trees. Mush less gun deaths in Australia and UK even on per head
population.
#2. That American gung-ho culture which is worsening : everything
has the same solution , bang bang. There is irrefutable medical evidence that
when children grow up being bombarded with an avalanche of violent, sexual ,
anti-social attitudes and actions on TV, in books and in movies, they grow up
being immunized against pain and suffering ( especially that of others ). Video
games of " kill kill kill " translate into imagery deaths with no consequence. (
Sometimes the dead come back alive ). This unfortunate attitude leads to
violence and depression. Mental health network is rotting or rotten and this is
where early depression and self harm ( plus psychopathic ) ideations are missed
and go untreated. This sort of tragedy is the natural outcome of that volcanic
eruption at the end. Suicide or homicide , or both.
emucentral 2007-4-17 15:02
I grew up on a farm. My brother and I used to
shoot with a "slug gun" and my father had a .22 rifle.
The only shooting I
do now is with a cannon, sorry Canon.
Guns are nice pieces of metalwork and
engineering and I can understand people wanting to collect them, just like I
collect cameras.
However there is a wider responsibility to the community
(not armament manufacturers) and I think the US gun laws are simply too
lax.
Mind you, that's not guaranteed to prevent every similar event.
Here
in Australia, if you want to go hunting with a shotgun or a rifle, you can. If
you want to do target shooting with a handgun/pistol well you can still do it
(in a licensed sporting club with target facilities) What you cannot do is buy
automatic weapons more suited to a war zone. You aren't allowed to stroll around
the place wearing a pistol (unless you're a cop or licensed security
guard).
The student who killed two classmates at Monash University a couple
of years ago, was a registered pistol shooter at a local club, and somehow
managed to bring those weapons to the classroom.
The people who say "guns
don't kill, people kill people" are right, but those people don't like to admit
that guns make the whole killing thing a lot more "efficient".
The guy who
committed this mass murder was reported to have been under some stress. Whether
he is a US citizen, a foreign student or a man from mars is largely irrelevant.
His ability to fit in, understand the teachers, or relate to his girlfriend
may be issues, but I agree that his actual ethnicity is not.
Against the control
bruhklyn 2007-4-17 14:09
guns don't kill people. people kill people.
I
can buy hairspray tomorrow and make a flame thrower... should we stop selling
hairspray?
i can buy a kitchen knife tomorrow and stab people... should we
stop selling kitchen knives?
i can buy bleach tomorrow and poison people...
so we should stop cleaning our clothes with bleach?
come on think people.
fyrstar 2007-4-17 19:20
Gun control? Guns were BANNED on school campus.
Did that stop him?
Gun control only ensures that the defenseless are unarmed.
If the students would have been armed, that would NOT have happened
cyberspook 2007-4-17 11:31
the focus should rightly be placed on his
state of mind and the fact that his deteriating mental capacity was not picked
up earlier , and by the way I think you will find that the gun crimes in england
have actualy increased since there gun law crackdown , law abiding people do not
go on the rampage killing inocent people , twisted sicko's that have had some
kind of mental break do those thing's , he could easily of drove his car through
a pre school and killed a whole lot of little kids , the fact that he chose to
use a firearm is regretable for every law abiding gun owner the world over , his
actions are not representative of the majority of gun owners nor would it ever
be condoned by them , myself included .
yydavid 2007-4-17 11:47
it is too hard for the government to control the
guns,as it is said that owning guns means democracy,and let the people have the
ability to overthrow the government when it goes too far.
nosferatu 2007-4-17 21:34
Regarding the American right to own guns. The
call for more gun control is always raised when something like this occurs.
There have also been occasions when a driver has aimed their car at innocent
bystanders on a sidewalk, and killed several. I never hear calls for 'car
control' when this occurs. Or with the use of fertilizer (Amonia Nitrate) to
blow up a government building in Oklahoma City. The fact is, the fault and
responsibility for killing others lies with the individual. And that deranged
person will find a way to kill regardless of the laws and restrictions put on
him, even if he has only a knife.
Racial stereotyping?
mengzhi 2007-4-17 06:22
That reflex racial
stereotyping .
This is an unmitigated tragedy involving the loss of tens of
innocent young lives. The ease with which the ugly head of racial stereotyping
as reared here and in the real world outside is scary. What if the shooter is
Asian ? Would you like to find out if he is born in the States first ? Would you
not wish to know something about the background to his obvious depression
leading to this psychopathic actions ? Would you care to find out if he has had
recent family grief ( eg lost a brother in Iraq ) ? No,no ,no ?? It is a sick
society which breeds such sick behaviour.
So glad to see ( so far ) that the
whole Muslim world has not be fingered to take responsibilty. Pretty reflexive
sickos. Like to hear from the same if the shooter turns out to be christian
Anglo-Saxon. " Just a bad apple " is what you should be prepared to hear then.
Right
emucentral 2007-4-17 07:43
Australia's largest shooting rampage was by a
blond anglo saxon with a mental disorder.
The Hoddle St, Massacre shooter
another anglo saxon, and a loner.
The guy who shot seven people at Monash
university (killing two) an Asian student with a psychological disorder.
What
these sorts of shootings have in common is not race or ethnicity, but
psychological or mental problems and far too easy access to weapons which can
kill rapidly
rfhu22 2007-4-17 19:33
Racial stereotyping rampant
Furthermore, if the
guy in Virginia had been an African-American, I am sure he would be described as
being 'a young student' as political correctness would have it. Instead, it
seems 100% of Americans are unknowingly, unashamedly and ignorantly, referring
to the gunman as Asian; they are guilty of racial profiling with you
self-righteously saying that race has nothing to do with it and expressing
affrontery at peoples' apparent callousness on this site. Funny, and maybe
telling, you think?
mengzhi 2007-4-17 19:05
I do not know if some of those callous remarks
are in fact from Chinese! The fact that this killer was Chinese from the
Mainland on a student's visa has nothing to do with the mental illness he
suffered from, the incompetent and negligent administration shown by the campus
security systems or the larger " crime " of no gun control in the USA. Many a
non-Chinese have shot up Americans in American schools before. To somehow
emphsise and enlarge this one irrelevant aspect of the tragedy is to show
immaturity, ignorance and a rapid fire mouth just like one of those
machine-pistols used. Spend a quiet moment in memory of the unfortunate
mengzhi 2007-4-18 05:02
Loose mouths cost lives.
There should be a
discussion about the way a perpetrator of a crime , especially where lives are
lost , need be described. There used to be a code of professional conduct for
journalists . It required the highest standard of care and checks , and double
check , of details before submitting them as facts to print. In this modern
times of " scoops and exclusives " ( read avarice ), that self dignity has gone
by the way side. Headlines need to be " different, bold and shocking " . Never
mind accuracy, sensitivity and "
need to know ".
This present tragedy
brought along the same ( not unusual ) tide of the scumbags and flotsam
masquerading as " journalists ". The media is a free fire zone to these ferals:
anything goes. Describing the shooter as " Asian " is correct simply because he
is Asian looking and was described as such by a witness who was there. What came
next isl ike the vultures descending from the strathosphere . They brought along
with them a trail of gossips, racial stereotyping, presumptions and just plain
lies. Eg: Where the devil did " A Chinese national from Shanghai " got into the
picture ? Did someone thought that up while on the loo suffering from
constipation ? Both of the physical and the mental kinds ? Pooh-bah and all.
Scum does not describe them adequately.
These " banter " can have
consequences. It would have been bad enough for all Chinese if this is true.
Innocent people could have been spat at, cursed and harassed and even harmed or
killed because of this lie. We all know that there is an army of cretinous
vigilante bigots out there who do not need more than a gossip like this to "
justify " their righteous rampage and carnage.
I do not take pleasure in
finding out that it is a South Korean migrant ( PR ) in the US Cho Seung-hui,
23, who turned out to be the killer. It is sad for his family to bear the guilt
for ever but all Koreans ( and Asians ) in the USA will have to look over their
shoulders for the next umpteen months. Although most Americans are not racists,
it requires only a handful to make life hell for the Koreans ( in this instance
) and Asians as they " all look alike ".
The standard of journalism is rotten
to the core in the western media. Simple self checks of facts even seem to be
too difficult for some. An all round sad , bad and mad day for the Americans.
Take care
nosferatu 2007-4-17 21:34
Difference in reactions
Even the posts
on this thread reflect the personal/cultural differences between
Americans/Westerners and the forumites of Chinese ethnicity.
One of the first
posts here tries to point out that the fact the shooter was Asian did not mean
the massacre was motivated by racism. I wish that such cool-headed, logical
thinking would have also been followed when discussing any slight against
Asian/Chinese citizens, such as the Milan incident discussed in a 'Changing
China' thread.
Apparently, whenever an Asian/Chinese person is caught up in
violence/police action, they are victims of institutionalized racism commonly
directed against them, and are obviously innocent of any wrong-doing. Even when
additional information has been provided to clear up details and explain these
incidents, those crying racism have disappeared, and will not offer an apology
or admit they were wrong.
But when an Asian/Chinese is the perpetrator of
violence/police action that injures others, it is an isolated incident, and
everyone should be careful not to jump to conclusions until the whole story is
known. (Just heeard he was South Korean).
I am not calling for blame to be
put on an entire group for one man/woman's actions. What I am pointing out is
the glaring differences in responses.
Regarding the American right to own
guns. The call for more gun control is always raised when something like this
occurs. There have also been occasions when a driver has aimed their car at
innocent bystanders on a sidewalk, and killed several. I never hear calls for
'car control' when this occurs. Or with the use of fertilizer (Amonia Nitrate)
to blow up a government building in Oklahoma City. The fact is, the fault and
responsibility for killing others lies with the individual. And that deranged
person will find a way to kill regardless of the laws and restrictions put on
him, even if he has only a knife.
If Americans were as violent and barbaric as some forumites claim, then there
should be many more massacres occurring on a weekly basis. After all, guns are
easy to obtain, right? The fact is that these types of incidents is relatively
rare for a nation with a large population like the United States.
No discrimination
rfhu22 2007-4-17 21:44
My point exactly...the use of the word Asian is
in itself racial stereotyping. Think about it.
eightyeight 2007-4-17 21:48
The student that was an eye-witness described
him as Asian, she was describing the shooter.
Asian is a description used
everywhere by everyone -- it not a sterotype per se it is a physical description
of characteristics everyone throughout the world recognized and uses, including
Asians.
gratewall 2007-4-17 23:45
It's no racial issue. It's cold-blooded
shooting by a psychopath. It's a tragedy of the human race. Condolences to the
innocent victoms. I feel so sad. Let's not politicise it or turn it to a racial
issue.
The tragedy is linked with the U.S.
culture
eightyeight 2007-4-17 08:53
The problem dear one is due to too much
Holliganwood propaganda and an uncaring tyrannical government that is not
interested in creating values, nor opportunities for the youth of a nation duped
by the government's unwillingness to remove the drugs from America, take care of
its people and foster a life of promise and happiness -- a government hell-bent
on domination and control, God-sent and God-given, no doubt! The American looks
forward to a life full of drugs, alcohol and entertainment like CSI, The West
Wing deceit, the gross vice-filled perversion of Grey's Anatomy and the lunacy
of such films as the 300, Mission Impossible, Batman and Spiderman, to name but
just a few. A deliberately dumbed-down nation of tomorrow's mercenaries -- Go
tell the Spartans!
myfriend 2007-4-17 08:54
Shooting is an American cowboy culture.
Bang
bang bang, that's cowboy culture. What else?
Bush was born in Texas, land of
the cow boys. What surprise?
Americans are warmongering in the world,
thousands of miles away from their own homes. Why? It's the damned American
culture.
holidays 2007-4-17 10:14
Let's just look at this case. The killer has no
previous criminal record. He could be as normal as you and me. Obviously he
snapped. And he went to the gun shop, bought two guns and bunch of bullets. And
then the rest is history. Mass killing is just as easy as that. Anybody can do
it.
About having gun for protection. Are you kidding me? Then tell me why
there ain't some good gun owners had stopped him? So are you telling me in order
to protect ourselves, everybody shall carry a gun?
In UK, I rarely heard
people were gun down, mostly knifed. And the death rate is far less than in the
US.
When boys are young, they love to play with toy guns, tanks, bombs. Even
many of the American heroes-- the soldiers from Iraq, admit that war is
addictive, carrying gun and powerful weapon make them feel like god.Human nature
is violent, period.
Don't merely blame the culture. It just plays out human's
demons inside.
Better campus security? Don't the American schools nowadays
already look and feel like jails? Even we secure all the schools, what next?
Malls, thearters, restaurants, amusement parks...? Does it worth so much to keep
the freedom of having loaded guns?
The number of death toll in each case is
increasing faster and faster. I am sure it won't be the last case if no major
changes made in gun-possession-law.
It is sad day for America, the land of
the free (to kill).
myfriend 2007-4-17 11:29
Cultural differences
The political leader of
Americans, Bush, is pretty cocky about killing and wars. He would jump up and
down, pound on the podium, do anything just to win a foreign war. Americans are
conditioned since, perhaps, 4 years old to fight, shoot, lie, cheat and occupy.
So when they grow up to "holiday's" age, the cultural rift is huge and
irreversible. Naturally, "88"'s mindset is so twisted now that there is no way
he can understand my perspective. I understand.
honestj 2007-4-18 01:43
Don't be so quick to blame America. This is a
free country. There is nobody following us around, or controling us. Every
couintry and race has had sick people, that have done crazy things. In a free
society, that can happen, because there is no one controling you. There is good
and bad points with everything. I wouldn't trade this country for any other one,
in the world. If this country is so bad then why is it, that people from all
over the world are trying to get here to live.