Anyway, it seems to be transpiring that the perpetrator in this horrific massacre may have been motivated mostly be his own internal conflicts about his sexuality. But only time will tell. Too early to jump to conclusions.
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Spiral Out wrote: Mental health reforms are the only way to start resolving this problem.Spiral Out, I think you like your guns, love your guns, don't want to give them up, and are twisting yourself into a pretzel trying to come up with arguments that don't make you seem mental. The sky is blue (mostly), 2 + 2 = 4, and assault weapons and guns in general allow a perpetrator to kill large numbers of people more efficiently. Try to look at this issue from a logical standpoint. Don't do what most people do, and what you've done on this question - start with a conclusion and try to find the least illogical arguments to support your preconceived notion. Jesus.
Greta wrote:The same "dance" after each mass murder. Nothing changes.Actually, this time there seems to be a consensus that banning gun sales to folks on the no fly list could happen. We'll have to see.
Steve3007 wrote:Latching onto a group like ISIS would just be a way of expressing that anger at the apparent inconsistency and hypocrisy of the world.It also helps to deflects questions about the shooter's sexuality. He did it for Allah, right? Not because he wanted to be rid of the potentially stigmatising temptation posed by the club. Perish the thought!
Wilson wrote:Spiral Out, I think you like your guns, love your guns, don't want to give them up, and are twisting yourself into a pretzel trying to come up with arguments that don't make you seem mental.I'd destroy them tomorrow without hesitation if every single person, organization and government on the planet did the same. We're all in this together after all.
Wilson wrote:The sky is blue (mostly), 2 + 2 = 4, and assault weapons and guns in general allow a perpetrator to kill large numbers of people more efficiently."If we eliminate guns then we eliminate gun violence." Well no ****, genius. As if guns are the only way to commit mass violence. Guns may be the CURRENT way to commit their violence but all it takes is one major shift in policy to create one major shift in method.
Wilson wrote:Try to look at this issue from a logical standpoint.My position is based on real-world facts, textbook psychology and fundamental logic. Yours is based on an ignorance which creates emotional instability and fear.
Wilson wrote:Don't do what most people do, and what you've done on this question - start with a conclusion and try to find the least illogical arguments to support your preconceived notion.My supposed "preconceived notion" is actually an obvious real-world fact. Are you denying that those who commit these murders are mentally ill?
Spiral Out wrote: My supposed "preconceived notion" is actually an obvious real-world fact. Are you denying that those who commit these murders are mentally ill?You seem to think that all we have to do is throw money at the mental health system and that would cure all the mentally ill and prevent all mass violence. Really? You have a completely unrealistic conception of the powers of psychiatry. Many mentally ill people refuse to submit to psychiatric care. Of those that do, medication can help some of them get a grip on reality, but then it's very common for them to stop their meds because of side effects. Do you want Big Brother forcing people to submit to medical care they don't want? (In some cases I would, but I suspect you don't want government to have that much control, especially since the diagnosis is often unclear.) And many mentally ill patients don't respond to treatment.
Which would you rather have? A society without the guns or a society without the violently mentally-ill?
Wilson wrote:I think your solution is an attempt to come up with some answer that doesn't involve giving up your guns. But it doesn't make any sense. It really doesn't. Like so many gun owners who resist even minimal changes for regulating firearms, you are more interested in being able to have fun with your weapons than in preventing at least some future mass murders.The reason I won't give up my guns is because I know it won't make a damn bit of difference to anything. It would be a hollow and meaningless, and ultimately ineffective gesture.
Wilson wrote:You seem to think that all we have to do is throw money at the mental health system and that would cure all the mentally ill and prevent all mass violence.Not exactly, but focusing on improving mental health systems and treatment techniques is a better attempt to solve the issue than taking the lazy way out and being unthinkingly reactive.
Wilson wrote:You have a completely unrealistic conception of the powers of psychiatry.No, I have hope that psychology and psychotherapy can improve vastly if enough time and effort is put into research. Humans are intelligent enough to build something like the LHC but we're not intelligent enough to identify and treat someone who is highly likely to commit a mass killing?
Wilson wrote:Seriously, do you believe that we the taxpayers should spend money for psychiatric evaluation and treatment - for a year or more in many cases - for anyone who has ever acted out, was violent, showed hatred toward another group, or threatened someone? Are you willing to pay for that?We're all paying much more for far less than that already.
Wilson wrote:The answer is, you can't. A better psychiatric system might prevent an occasional atrocity, but it would miss 99% of them.Where'd you get that percentage? You have no vision of what the future might hold, so you go along with an unthinking population and choose the thoughtless reaction.
Wilson wrote:Plus it's all in how you define mental illness. Is someone who is suicidal and angry at the world and wants to kill others in a grand gesture actually mentally ill? Say that he's rational and just filled with hate and possibly self-disgust, as this man probably was. He wasn't technically mentally ill, unless you stretch the definition. In fact, I don't think most mass murderers fit into neat psychiatric categories, unless you postulate that "anyone who would do this is mentally ill". Most of them may have elements of narcissism, grandiosity, and lack of empathy - but that describes a lot of CEO's and politicians.Again, a society that can waste valuable time and resources driving a rover around on another planet remotely from Earth should be able to do more with the problem of violence. Here's an idea, maybe we could use some of this wondrous science to actually help people. What a **** concept.
Spiral Out wrote:I'm not claiming that ALL violence is caused by mental illness. However, in the case of the mass murders that we've been experiencing, it absolutely is. In order for someone to kill in that manner they must be mentally ill by the very nature of the act.1). Who says that someone who kills must be mentally ill? Is this a law? Or is this a pseudo-scientific assertion attempting to masquerade as common sense?
Interesting BBC article. Of course every adult male citizen in Switzerland has an assault rifle and several magazines of ammunition at home and they're gun crime rate is a lot nearer the UK's than the US', but then the Swiss are very odd people.If having a relatively low gun crime rate despite having a very high level of gun ownership is part of being odd, maybe we should all be more odd like them! Buy a few cuckoo clocks.
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