If we have recovered enough from past mass killings and felt safe once more, here we are again. An even more heinous massacre, families and a community destroyed for years, even generations to come. Sweet innocent children shot down in a bloody horror, and the adults who tried to protect them. Families who may never recover fully from the devastation of trauma and loss. Generations in Newtown to come that will resonate with it. A community that will perhaps never experience the magic of Christmas again. The children left who now have gone from a safe secure existence to a reality in which terrifying things are not in a distant fairy tale, they are real in whose forming brains are now wired with the moment in which their lives were about to end, and witnessed others’ lives that did end, and the guilt of survival. A nation feeling increasingly that we are never really safe. All of this created in a few short minutes by one disturbed young man.
Notice how the media are looking for “reasons” why Adam Lanza would commit such a horrific act. Was it that there were guns in the house? Did he play too many violent video games? Is he mentally ill? Was he abused or neglected? Some are pointing to gun laws and the mental illness system as faulty, or to the “violence of our culture,” meaning movies and video games desensitizing children to violence. But let’s be honest: you or I or anyone with a conscience can watch violent movies or play violent video games every day for years on end and still never have it in us to harm another person. Indeed, we witness much worse violence on a daily basis in the news much worse because it is real and this does not make us want to go out and kill someone. In the military, in preparing young people to go to war, they deliberately desensitize them to violence. Does this prevent them from experiencing the horror of killing someone in actual experience? Not for anyone with a conscience! They still come back with PTSD and are haunted their whole lives from it.
Perhaps, yes, there should be a heightening of background checks for those who purchase guns, including checking registries for psychiatric wards, and the types of guns available. And, yes, I agree that we have to stop with the worries about family privacy and start screening early on in schools for signs of potential future violence in children, in the hopes of intervening in those children’s lives to prevent future violence.
Make no mistake about it, the mental health system is severely lacking in this country. I worked for years as a supervisor in homes for the chronic mentally ill, then in an outpatient program for those with dual diagnosis, i.e., an addiction and a mental illness. We do not have enough resources and housing for the mentally ill, nor help for families dealing with it. But statistics show that many more mentally ill people kill themselves than in the normal population, while violence is less prevalent among the mentally ill, contrary to myths claiming the opposite. A violent psychotic person is actually a rare thing. Someone who commits violence while in a psychotic break from reality, such as Son of Sam, is quite rare. Also, those with autism or Aspberger’s syndrome, which it is rumored the perpetrator may have had, are not known for violence. While those disorders do have the characteristic, to different degrees, of decreased social skills and connection because of the way their brains are formed, and they do tend to have “meltdowns’ from their nervous system sensitivity, they rarely harm anyone.
Let’s look at the statistics for people who are abused. Probability would suggest that the majority of you reading this have had some form of abuse in your past. The majority of clients I interview have. The statistics for sexual abuse alone are about 1 in 3 or 4 for girls, and about half of that for boys. Then there are the other forms of abuse: ongoing verbal or physical abuse by parents, siblings or others, parental neglect, bullying, the abuse of one parent by another, neighborhood violence — all forms of abuse or trauma. Then there are other factors that can cause vulnerabilities in coping, such as the divorce or death of parents, a mental illness, an autism spectrum disorder, a learning disability causing school failure, the lack of support. But, if I asked a roomful of people if they have experienced one or more of these things, most would raise their hands. How many of those people would go out and harm, never mind kill, someone?
All of the questions the media are asking appear to be confusion and the unfathomability of trying to wrap their minds around such an unspeakable act. My intention here is not to judge Adam Lanza, or the circumstances that may have contributed to his trigger to plan a massacre. But those who have experienced harm of varying degrees by a socio/psychopath (i.e. someone without a conscience) know this for sure: In spite of any “reasons” or precipitating factors that may contribute, the socio/psychopaths’ method to feel good with themselves (i.e. to avoid their pain) at the expense of another person is a choice in destruction.
It comes down to this: Adam Lanza made an evil choice. Once the sick seed was planted and grew in his mind of how he could glorify himself by feeling all-powerful over human life, releasing his rage, and going down in history as committing one of the most notoriously heinous crimes in our nation, apparently nothing was going to stop him. And the rest of us have to live with the fallout of his vile choice forever.
I do not believe Adam was a psychopath. I believe he suffered from Aspergers (as indicated by his mother) and bipolar disorder. There is evidence of a linkage:
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2FBF02211877?LI=true
Thus, I believe he was in a manic rage, compounded by various difficulties due to Aspergers. I know several people who are bipolar and all of them have manic difficulties around this time of the year. One of them is very, very difficult when manic and becomes verbally and physically abusive. I try to talk him thru this episodes but at the same time, I keep distance for fear of my personal safety, as he has a history of lashing out at friends and family members.
As for assault rifle bans, he used PISTOLS not assault rifles to kill the children. Weapon control of any kind isn’t the answer but I am sure that there will be some kind of “bans” on guns…and people will “feel better” about it….just like the TSA searching old lady’s diapers before they get on an airplane makes people feel safer…but if push comes to shove and “they” want to blow up a plane they will succeed sooner or later.
I own guns and will use them to defend myself. with 47% of the homes in the US having at least one gun, I doubt that they are going to take away all guns, or all pistols in my life time. But who knows?
There will always be predators though, and those need to be controlled.
Ooops, I didn’t know that…sorry…I thought he used some type of automatic weapons?
Regarding guns, I strongly believe the availability and lack of control is a huge part of the problem. The Swiss example is not apples-to-oranges, as the owners of the guns are also trained members of their military, and it is a small country with a unique tradition.
I do support the right to bare arms for defense or hunting. However, this right does not extend to assault weapons, semi-automatic weapons and high-capacity magazines. In addition, sales should be highly regulated and include stricter background checks, the requirement for proper training and locked storage.
Equally important, the larger issue of homicide needs to be address in this country. Our homicide rate is nearly 4 times that of Western Europe, an appalling statistic that should be a major national concern — sadly it is not. This does not include accidental deaths and suicides, many of which are committed with guns. It also does not include those killed “in self defense,” a standard that in some states should cause great concern, as in Florida.
Stricter gun control laws will not stop all these killings, However, it will reduce many of them without putting the legitimate needs of some at risk.
Ox;
One of Adam Lanza’s weapons was an semi-automatic assault rifle:
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/editorials/adam_lanza_weapons_NU2tb0tIf9hNsOCZkPJ1XP
I understand though that it was left in the vehicle, not take into the school. I may be wrong but that is my understanding. Assault rifles are great for killing from a DISTANCE but up close and personal a pistol is much better or a shot gun and there are 30 round clips for pistols as well. Banning “assault” rifles may stop folks from snipering out of bell towers (or slow them down) or may not as the good deer/elk rifles can kill at 1,000 yards or more.
BBE, I think you and I have differing views on “gun control” and what it would mean…I think we should agree to disagree and I do not want to discuss gun control any further in the event that it should turn into a political discussion that could cause some hurt feelings.
I think each of us has a well considered point of view and discussing it here in THIS FORUM is not the appropriate place to discuss it or debate the merits or lack of merits of this or that position so from here on out I am not going to discuss THIS issue about the horrible attacks at the school.
I respect the rights of everyone here to their opinion about weapons of all kinds including your opinions.
Ox;
My point is to regulate those weapons which produce a large volume of rapid fire. A Bushmaster Assault Rifle is not required for deer hunting…
BBE
I repeat:
I do not want to discuss gun control any further in the event that it should turn into a political discussion that could cause some hurt feelings.
Maybe something happened to him at that age. Just guessing but while reading the posts that kept coming to mind.
Who knows?. It was definitely something and it’s been my experience USA will swing wildly the other direction creating problems due to extreme attempt at a fix. I personally would appreciate a wild swing into love and joy and peace rather than murder and hate and turmoil. Sociopaths/psychopaths would sure stand out or their victims would look like the problem causer while they look all sappy and loving as we are carted away…..lol
There was a neuroscientist on HLN last night who has a lack of empathy and said the brain is hard wired to kill and it’s societal norms and teachings that keep it in check??? I didn’t really feel like I could relate to that. He said he had the ability to feel some sort of empathy for strangers but not with anyone close to him. Very clinically speaking man. He was kind of creepy to me.