There have always been mean and crazy people. The solution would be to deal with them (eliminate them) early on, when they were first identified as antisocial misfits. Most of this type of thing could be prevented.
2007-04-17 01:52:16
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I think it is more a question that kids are not taught how to deal with pressure from an early age. They are so protected now that they are never allowed to experience real challenges and "failure". They are not allowed to compete because it could damage their little psyches. So when they finally get into a competitive environment they don't have the coping skills to deal with it.
Given that reality, services such as you describe are probably necessary. But it is rather like closing the barn door after the horse is out. Instead of fixing the problems that contribute to this condition, we are putting a bandaid on the end result.
2007-04-17 09:07:50
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answer #2
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answered by kathy_is_a_nurse 7
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No. Are you kidding? If anything, kids have less pressure than they did 75 years ago. With so many technological advances they have it much, much easier. Back then, not only did kids have to attend school, but they had to tend farms, assist in helping raise their brothers and sisters, and perhaps help bring in some much needed money to the family. You know what? Things were drastically more stable back then. They didn't have time to fall into states of depression, or pre-meditate a massacre, there was work to be done.
These days, kids are practically having easy lives handed to them on silver platters. Perhaps that's the problem. The decline of society and the value of hard work. You know what they used to say, "Idle hands are the devil's tools." It just may be true.
2007-04-17 08:57:18
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answer #3
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answered by Karma 6
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No, I don't think pressure is the reason. as the pressure today is no greater than in past generations. The pressures are different, but no greater. Perhaps there is always a percentage of the population that will break down and react with violence, and since the population in general keeps growing, this % of violent person also obviously translates into more people, and that accounts for the increased number of incidents. Social programs are great but healing begins at home and people need to nuture their own.
2007-04-17 08:54:34
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answer #4
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answered by GEEGEE 7
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No. The pressure in colleges is not anywhere near historic levels endured by previous generations or by immigrants. The problem is that some people feel that the actions they commit won't have consequences to them personally. Many of these shooters commit suicide because they have fallen for the belief that once they are dead, it is all over. However, One who died and then returned, has shown all mankind that there is a judgement after this.
2007-04-17 08:53:12
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answer #5
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answered by wildmlwilson 2
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I don't think its the pressure as much as it is the isolation. People are so separated from each other, even when they are in the same room. The proliferation of cellphones, internet combined with the hectic schedules causes people to be so wrapped up with themselves that they neglect the others around them. Then those younger people feel insignifigant and lash out in the worst way.
2007-04-17 08:58:18
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answer #6
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answered by bebop_groove_bonanza 3
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You know that they do have ALL of that available for students at high school and in college, but how are they going to force someone to go to a school counselor? Think about Columbine, they said that THEIR parents didn't even know, so how do you think that having more school counselors is going to help? Do you really think if there had been more of them or more money, that he would have walked in and told him he was going to do this? I don't think so, it's not the school's fault that it happened. No matter how many school counselors we have it wouldn't have stopped this.
2007-04-17 08:52:07
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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What pressures are there today that have not ALWAYS been there? Why would you think today it is harder than before? If anything, it is ridiculously easier with the invention of the computer, and the expansion of the internet.
There are not that many shootings, it's just that the ones you see are terrible.
2007-04-17 08:51:55
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answer #8
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answered by rattyboo 3
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What causes shootings at school goes back to bad parenting of the student. School shootings were pretty much non existant years ago and the only thing that changed was single parent families and bad parenting
2007-04-17 08:53:24
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answer #9
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answered by Saint Lucipher 3
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No its a individual desire to inflict upon others a punishment, and it is triggered by some thing that is mostly never obvious until after the act no amount of extra spending or more staff can predict that.~~
2007-04-17 08:59:27
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answer #10
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answered by burning brightly 7
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