you can ask people this question and make them think
but in the end its useless becuase they will deny blame to themselves.
im with you on this one.
2007-04-18 22:52:08
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't believe that "we" pushed any mass murder to the point of going on a rampage. Everybody perceives reality differently. The fact that this young man was from Korean descent tells a lot about his upbringing (or) we can assume that he was raised in a typical Korean environment. This guy was very angry at the world as a whole. It didn't matter who you were or how you knew him, he calculated everybody the same way because of the way he "perceived his own reality". It's only human to have a question of quilt as to why something happened after the fact, but the reality of it is that people did reach out to this guy but because of the fact that he only saw things from a certain perspective, he was not capable of changing.
2007-04-17 15:10:53
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answer #2
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answered by wize1 2
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I too am from Utica, and once I heard with regard to the dying of Officer Lindsey Thursday night it made me depressed, thinking the place humanity is going, remembering back to the hot Hartford(adjoining city) officer being killed merely final 12 months. on the instant once I heard with regard to the Virginia Tech shooting, it made me actually ill to my abdomen i've got been thinking lots approximately what might desire to pass on in those human beings's minds. All i will arise with is one component's for useful, those human beings are heartless. the place is the peace? Why is there hatred? Why is there war? Why will no longer be able to human beings stay harmoniously? the place is the affection? might God be with anybody!
2016-12-29 05:46:15
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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We can always say no its not us, its the society and some people just doesn't fit into the society. But we the people constitutes the very fibres of society and in another word we had pushed into the edge.
Its a tragedy nevertheless and some people have tendencies not able to handle pressure, or fit into the society. Thus it becomes the society's burden to identify such people and help them.
I guess our system is inadequate at identifying and helping such individual.
2007-04-17 14:59:16
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answer #4
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answered by Miasmarizing 3
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A law abiding citizen with a right to carry permit and carring a concealed weapon, could have stopped the shooter in his tracks and stop his rampage. We don't want or need to be disarmed because a foreigner shoots at our students. More the reason to allow right to carry privileges.
2007-04-17 15:08:47
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answer #5
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answered by LuckyChucky 5
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I know that in the past, students have gone on shooting rampages because they had been bullied or didn't fit in. It sounds like this time, it was over a fight or breakup with his girlfriend. He just lost it and went over the edge. I don't think it is anybody's fault that he chose to do this. He had 2 hours between the first 2 he killed and then the 31 others. He had time to rethink what was going on and he chose to continue his killing spree. There is no telling what is going on in a person's mind like that.
2007-04-17 14:59:25
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answer #6
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answered by vanhammer 7
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No, No, No, No, No, No, No, and No.
It is our responsibility to be aware of these symptoms in each other however. One of the teachers actually reported this person to the police and they failed to act, saying that his antisocial writing and behavior did not rise to the level of criminal intent. Can you imagine how those officers feel today? Can you imagine how frustrating it is to be a person who cared enough to act, knowing that your action was not enough to save those lives? We can't beat ourselves up over the tragedy. Self blame can easily take us down the same wrong path that this person followed. How many of us know someone who is just four or five steps away from the same place this person got to? Have you done anything to keep yourself and your friends safe. Have you done anything to keep this person from making a choice that will end his or her options forever, along with many other peoples? These are the questions we need to be asking.
2007-04-17 15:06:11
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answer #7
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answered by MUDD 7
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I don't know unless you knew him or had been around him you couldn't know if people had tried to talk to him or include him or they were mean or ignored him
most of the time it seems like the killings have little to do with the people killed, like they just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time or were singled out because they were girls or kids
2007-04-17 14:58:21
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answer #8
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answered by ♥Selena♥ 3
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No, it is not our fault. Each person has to make their own effort to make friends/connect with others. He was even suggested to visit counseling by his professor but he chose not to go.
However, there could have been other measures done to have prevented the event and/or keep the second round of shooting from happening (i.e. responding to the first shooting)
2007-04-17 14:58:59
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answer #9
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answered by Rex 4
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no it was not our fault.
it was his fault.
he made a conscious decision to do what he did.
I'm sick and tired of worrying about everyone' self esteem. if you are having problems get some help and stop blaming others for your bad behavior!!!
boo hoo, my mother didn't love me. boo hoo my dad hit me with a belt. boo hoo my wife left me.
thank god he blew his head off saved the tax payers from a trial or from putting him in the nut house and paying his keep forever!!!
2007-04-17 15:00:11
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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We didn't load his gun for him. Everyone has problems. You really have to be weak minded to kill 33 people. It takes a demented mind!
He was a monster and no one is responsible for this incident except the boy who decided that he was too weak to just take his own life instead of murdering incident children.
2007-04-17 14:57:15
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answer #11
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answered by Lilith_Angel 2
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