(((((chief))))) that was divine and very very well said. Namaste my brother. May all of our love lights shine in this dawning of a new age of consciousness and awakening. May we all continually hold out our hands to friends and those who need us even more...the bastards as we would call them. When one suffers we all suffer....peace begins within and may we each strive for that and love all those who are a part of us. We did a meditation the other day where you inhale peace and exhale love....what a beautiful thing. We need more of it in this world.
You got it all wrong guy. We need to arm more people. the largest mass-murder spree killing before this happened was in texas in the early nineties and the families who were torn apart because of it were the driving force behind that state's CCW laws. One of the survivors had a gun in her car and ddint bring onto the premises because of the up to then strict carry laws. She watched her family be killed because she trusted in gun control. You cant stop a psychopath from killing, you can only defend yourself. think about it, Cho purchased his first firearm over a month ago, presented 3 different forms of ID, no prior incidents with the law and not felon so a background check would have ment nothing, he was patient enough to wait a month to buy his second gun. Do you really think tighter laws would have stopped him? They got school killings over in China too, only there they like to use blades not firearms. You increase the amount of the general populace in an area that own firearms and it decreases crime, not the other way around. It was like shooting fish in a barrell to the guy. Not only that but gun laws are stricter now than 50 years ago, but school shootings are a recent phenom, so obviously wether or not gun laws are strict enough is beside the point... Shit, the 911 hijackers ddnt need guns in order to kill 3000+ people (although PROAVTIVE citizens stopped on plane from hitting anything but a meadow), Harris and Klebold used pipe bombs and propane tanks, McVeigh and Nichols used fertilizer and fuel oil. you take away guns and you end up just creating more targets. Killers are not going to be deterred by stricter laws, and those "no guns on premises" stickers that were just placed on that campus saved no one because they are useless. killers will get guns, if they cant get guns theyll get knives, if not knives then box cutters, if not box cutters then they'll use 8th grade chemistry knowledge to make a bomb.... And once you've made it virtually impossible for anyone to legally purchase a firearm for personal protection who is going to save your life in those situations? the police arriving just as #32 is wasted? the campus that alerts you 2 hours after the killing starts? maybe the rentacop waving a baton? or perhaps you think if we "just catch them and get them help before they turn evil"? you cant get everyone they psychological help they need, and remember Bundy, some people cant be fixed...
Here he is... NBC got a video from him which he sent out BETWEEN killings on the campus! You gotta see the video cause you'll hear why he did it!
chimpanzes kill each other to, I guess it is just our breed. The real question is what could have been done to stop the kid from killing in the first place? someone saw something way before and didn't do the rite thing. Ultimatley its our fault, Americans love to lay blame, but maybe it ain't such a bad thing. This way we all know who needs to do better next time.
BLACKSBURG, Va. - Long before he killed 32 people in the worst mass shooting in U.S. history, Cho Seung-Hui was bullied by fellow high school students who mocked his shyness and the strange way he talked, former classmates said. Cho, 23, a senior English major at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, killed 32 people in two attacks before taking his own life Monday. He sent a large multi-media package outlining his grievances against religion and the wealthy to NBC News, but police said Thursday that the material added little to their investigation. The text, photographs and video in the package bristle with hatred toward unspecified people whom Cho, a South Korean immigrant, accused of having wronged him, adding to a portrait of a solitary man who rarely, if ever, managed normal social interactions. Chris Davids, a Virginia Tech student who graduated with Cho from Westfield High School in Chantilly, Va., in 2003, recalled that Cho almost never opened his mouth and would ignore attempts to strike up a conversation. Hotwater