PDA

View Full Version : Mass Shootings in America: Moving Beyond Newtown



Chris
12-20-2013, 05:05 PM
Mass Shootings in America: Moving Beyond Newtown (http://hsx.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/11/27/1088767913510297.full.pdf+html) is a fact-based assessment of mass shootings and solutions.


Mass shootings at a Connecticut elementary school, a Colorado movie theater, and other venues have prompted a fair number of proposals for change. Advocates for tighter gun restrictions, for expanding mental health services, for upgrading security in public places, and, even, for controlling violent entertainment have made certain assumptions about the nature of mass murder that are not necessarily valid. This article examines a variety of myths and misconceptions about multiple homicide and mass shooters, pointing out some of the difficult realities in trying to avert these murderous rampages. While many of the policy proposals are worthwhile in general, their prospects for reducing the risk of mass murder are limited.Mass shootings at a Connecticut elementary school, a Colorado movie theater, and other venues have prompted a fair number of proposals for change. Advocates for tighter gun restrictions, for expanding mental health services, for upgrading security in public places, and, even, for controlling violent entertainment have made certain assumptions about the nature of mass murder that are not necessarily valid. This article examines a variety of myths and misconceptions about multiple homicide and mass shooters, pointing out some of the difficult realities in trying to avert these murderous rampages. While many of the policy proposals are worthwhile in general, their prospects for reducing the risk of mass murder are limited.

Now that piqued my interest, it was going to debunk a lot of commonly help myths about mass shootings and solutions to the problem. I should have pain more attention to the final concluding sentence and stopped reading.

The paper debunks the following myths factually and rationally:



Myth: Mass Murderers Snap and Kill Indiscriminately
Myth: Mass Shootings Are on the Rise
Myth: Recent Mass Murders Involve Record-Setting Body Counts
Myth: Violent Entertainment, Especially Video Games, Are Causally Linked to Mass Murder
Myth: Greater Attention and Response to the Telltale Warning Signs Will Allow Us to Identify Would-Be Mass Killers Before They Act
Myth: Widening the Availability of Mental Health Services Will Allow Unstable Individuals to Get the Treatment They Need and Avert Mass Murders
Myth: Enhanced Background Checks Will Keep Dangerous Weapons Out of the Hands of These Madmen
Myth: Restoring the Federal Ban on Assault Weapons Will Prevent These Horrible Crimes
Myth: Expanding “Right to Carry” Provisions Will Deter Mass Killers or at Least Stop Them in Their Tracks and Reduce the Body Counts
Myth: Increasing Physical Security in Schools and Other Places Will Prevent Mass Murder
Myth: Having Armed Guards at Every School Will Serve to Protect Students From an Active Shooter and Provide a Deterrent as Well


Now each of those is worthy of looking at in depth and discussing, but, again, each of those common explanations and solutions is debunked with facts and logic. One is left with what seems like an intractable problem, searching for other solutions.

Then the paper throws all that out and comes to a wholly unfactual, illogical, self-contradicting non sequiturs:


The fact that gun control, expanded psychiatric services, and increased security measures are limited in their ability to prevent dreadful mass shootings doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t try. In the immediate aftermath of the Newtown shooting, there was momentum in Washington, D.C., and in various state legislatures to establish policies and procedures designed to make us all safer.

Gun restrictions and other initiatives may not stop the next mass murderer, wherever he or she may strike, but we can enhance the well-being of millions of Americans in the process. Besides, doing something is better than doing nothing. At least, it will reduce the debilitating feeling of helplessness.

Many of the well-intentioned proposals coming in response to the recent spike in mass shootings may do much to affect the level of violent crime that plagues our nation daily. We shouldn’t, however, expect such efforts to take a big bite out of crime in its most extreme form. Of course, taking a nibble out of the risk of mass murder, however small, would still be a worthy goal for the nation. However, those who have suggested that their plan for change will ensure that a crime such as the Sandy Hook massacre will never reoccur will be bitterly disappointed.

Eliminating the risk of mass murder would involve extreme steps that we are unable or unwilling to take—abolishing the Second Amendment, achieving full employment, restoring our sense of community, and rounding up anyone who looks or acts at all suspicious. Mass murder just may be a price we must pay for living in a society where personal freedom is so highly valued.


Feel good politics is amazing, simply amazing.

waltky
12-11-2017, 05:02 PM
5th anniversary of attack on Sandy Hook already...


Five Years Have Passed Since Sandy Hook Massacre
December 11, 2017 - The small town of Newtown, Connecticut lives in a world still shaped by the morning of Dec. 14, 2012.


Newtown, Conn., mother Erin Nikitchyuk, like many in her small town, lives in a world still shaped by the morning of Dec. 14, 2012. It’s the small things that stir her emotions, the subtle reminders of what happened after a heavily armed madman parked his car outside the Sandy Hook Elementary School. Just sitting behind the wheel as she drives from her house off Route 34 to the interstate is a frequent trigger. “You pass the houses that should have a child playing in the driveway,” she says, “and you say the names.”


There were 20 slain kids, each with a promising past that belied the heartbreak of their lost future: Avielle Rose Richman, age 6, whose family made a new home in Newtown after moving from California. Six-year-old Noah Pozner — with his tousled hair and bright smile, the youngest of all the victims — was buried the same day as classmate Jack Pinto, a sports fanatic who loved the New York Giants and Victor Cruz. Josephine Grace Gay, whose family celebrated her 7th birthday only three days earlier. She would have turned 12 this month. “Sometimes it feels like yesterday,” said Nikitchyuk, whose son Bear emerged intact after bullets whizzed past his head and killed his classmates. “Sometimes it seems like it was us — but it was a long time ago. “Sometimes it seems like it was somebody else and I just read about it.”



https://cdn.officer.com/files/base/cygnus/ofcr/image/2017/12/640w/US_NEWS_CONN_SCHOOLSHOOTING_ANNIVERSARY_12_NY.5a2e e0dbe6a2f.jpg
Graves of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School buried at Newtown Village Cemetery on Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2017 in Newtown, Conn.



As the fifth anniversary of the mass shooting approaches, a dark cloud descending on the suburban town of 27,000, the totems of that terrible day linger amid the central Connecticut landscape. Unseasonably warm December weather, particularly on a Friday. Two frisky shelter cats named Catalina and Sandy. Purple balloons floating above local mailboxes. Framed photos harking back to happier times. The altar inside the St. Rose of Lima church. “It’s still very real,” said the Rev. Robert Weiss, who presided over funeral upon funeral that endless winter. “I think about it a lot. I have a lot of flashbacks.”


Pictures of Lauren Rousseau are spread through her father Gilles’ house on the outskirts of Newtown. The 30-year-old substitute teacher, one of six school staffers killed that day, tried unsuccessfully to lock the shooter out of her first-grade classroom, giving her life in hopes of saving her students. “I like looking at photos of her,” the dad said about his daughter’s continued presence in his home. “She makes me happy. When I look at her picture, it just makes me smile. She loved the beach.” Rousseau tries not to think about the what-ifs: “I don’t try to imagine what it would be like. Maybe she’d be married by now?” But Rousseau can’t shake the sound of his ringing phone inside a movie theater where he had gone to see the new Steven Spielberg-Daniel Day Lewis movie “Lincoln.” His brother was calling. There was a shooting at the school. Had Rousseau heard anything? He rushed to Sandy Hook to find something beyond a nightmare. “It was chaotic, crazy,” he recalled. “Too many policemen, too many people in the crime scene.”


MORE (https://www.officer.com/command-hq/technology/security-surveillance/news/20985442/five-years-have-passed-since-sandy-hook-massacre)