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Virginia Tech Tragedy (this thread is NOT for the debate of "gun control")
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I can only say that I heard about this as I trawled news sites, but I had no way of picking up any broadcasts in my office at the moment. A shame because I had gotten so used to just turning the TV on during the day. I actually found the local 1010wins news station and streamed it. |
Oh Jesus...
I have a whole slew of comments that could be deemed as insensitive so I'm gonna keep my fuckin' mouth shut. For now. |
I know a lot of people that go to VT. here's what I've heard from them.
All are ok 1 of my friends knows 1 guy shot 3 times in the arms and legs. another friend knows 4 people shot, 1 girl in the stomach, another twice in the arm after he tried to keep the gunman out of the classroom. one of them, an RA, died. one of my friends lived in the dorm where the first shooting happened, and another of my friends was outside of the building when it happened, said people just came running out with gunshot wounds. good friend of mine was supposed to be in the engineering building at 9:00 but they stopped the buses and he couldn't get there. the cousin of my friends ex-girlfriend was killed. what a fucking tragedy (n i only share that information because its so insane to me that this could have easily been my friends killed.) |
This is truly tragic. I can't help but think how we might have prevented or even just mitigated such disaster from happening. My condolences to the victims.
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I'm still waiting for the details but my initial thought was how could someone shoot over 60 people in close quarters without someone shooting him back.
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Only hours after the incident, Jack Thompson, one of the presiding douches of the United States is on Fox News talking about how video games trained the killer. Not even a tragedy like this will stop him from focusing on his own agenda.
This is just sad. RIP. |
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To directly answer the question, I was always more concerned with how hung over or sore from a workout I was going to be in class than going there armed. I can't imagine that there are really any college students that carry on campus, when it is legal, especially a campus in a small town like VT. |
It's at 33 now according to CNN. And now the 2 separate shootings may or may not be connected. The 33 includes the or a shooter.
(2 in a dorm, 31 shot at an academic building) I have to agree there's all kinds of horrible comments that can made. Mostly I'd like to make horrible comments about the media. edit: And now I'm listening to an anchor person on cnn basically slam the officers involved in this investigation. double edit: Quote:
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My sister was in the building next door. I woke up with a text from her saying, "Me and my friends are safe, I love you all." This was before I read the news. Thank god, because I would have been in panic mode if I hadn't received it. I called her and she's shook up. Tears all around about what could have happened. My cousin also goes to school there but he's o.k. too, thank god.
I was just listening to NPR and a student was talking about being in the building with the shooter. Apparently he was laughing after every shot. Let's hope there is a special place in hell for this sicko. My thoughts and prayers go out to the victims. |
Maybe it's just me, but I don't see why is this front page news. Most people are just trying to further their own agenda, anyway...
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You fail to see how the deadliest campus shooting in American history is front page news? How is putting this on the front page furthering anyones agenda? Perhaps the funeral homes in the region have a hidden agenda. It's just a shame that this took the place of more news on Anna Nicole Smith.
Sorry for the heated tone, but my sister was very close to death. This is one story that hits close to home for me. |
Sorry, but how does this differ from a bad day in Iraq????
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Most notably because the campus of Virginia Tech isn't a war zone, although this doesn't make the deaths any more or less tragic.
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It is human nature to seek out blame when something this horrific occurs. I've been listening to a radio program that has set that aside in favor of discussing means of prevention. Gun policy was, of course, a part of the discussion, as were increased security measures to prevent an individual of this kind of getting on campus. I could go into detail about the suggestions considered, but the bottom line was that there are no practical solutions.
In truth, the last college campus incident of this kind was in 1966. This would suggest that our colleges are remarkable safe and I think it's important to keep this in mind when contemplating what happened today. To be clear, I am not of the same opinion concerning our K-12 schools. |
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What agenda could you possibly be talking about? Is this normal drive-by-criticism gibberish or do you have something to say- some kind of point you were trying to make? |
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Exactly. And the difference is... rich people died today. In Iraq, poor white people, minorities, and weird terrorists die. No one cares about them. |
that is such a bullshit statement, what the heck makes you think nobody cares about the people in iraq huh? JUST because a person professes outrage and compassion for the victims DOES NOT MEAN WE DONT CARE ABOUT ANYTHING ELSE.
Pardon me for seeing the difference in people sitting unprotected in a classroom than people that volunteered to put their lives on the line by being in the military. Military people CHOOSE to join <insert branch here> knowing full well what they are getting themselves into. College students dont apply to college to be sitting fucking ducks. Im sure any student with god knows how many years of student loan payments in their future will appreciate being called "rich" |
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edit: adding what i am responding to:
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As for the comment that no one cares about Iraqis, I assume that you are basing that on your own feelings on the issue? I grieve every time I read an article about a bombing in Iraq. It saddens me that they have become so commonplace that the media has stopped reporting them. |
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A guy cornering 30+ people in a room and then picking them off in what's quite literally an execution-style homicide spree, is something else entirely. |
WTF! It really sad when a thread about a tragedy get tromped on because we aren't minimizing it compared to a larger one or bringing up social economic issues! Death of young students is awful!
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yeah, this is like saying i can't be upset because my dog got run over because sheep get slaughtered every day in africa.
i think its horrible to hear that this happened, and i wish all involved peace and recovery where possible. |
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Hmmm, I think I see an interesting divide here between those who seem to feel that they're overexposed to "tragedy" by the media and those that aren't. Those of you that are don't see this as anything all that notable while those that aren't put it in the Pantheon of Horror.
No one's right; no one's wrong. Bad things happen all day every day. Some are more horrible than other and bear noting. The most horrific thing to happen to anyone I know barely made headlines outside of Chicago or Raleigh, NC. Tragedy, I think, is measured by the proximety of the victim to the observer. If, God forbid, Ballzor (a TFP member who's a VTU student) had been one of the victims, I think this thread would have a very different feel. |
does anyone know exactly what happened yet? or are we all speculating on what we've been fed by the talking heads?
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Death is common place. It happened way before you were born and it will continue to happen long after you die. Does that mean a single death is less sad? No. It just means it's something that the more you dwell on the harder it is to get past. I was actually pointing out that people die in large groups around the world each day. And for the most part Americans only give a flying blue fuck it involves a fellow American. Selfish assholes. |
Unc, what we don't know is quite a bit. The shooter didn't carry ID and didn't make any claim as to his purpose or reason. I wish the talking heads didn't feel so compelled to fill air time with suppositions.
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Edit: Added quote. I need to start quoting, I'm not used to these fast moving boards.
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On the one hand, there is truth to it. Either we value human life, or we don't. And if we do, all human life should have the same value so it only goes to show our ethnocentrism, class consciousness and racism when we make a big deal out of something closer to home. On the other hand, we live our lives based on our experiences and, lacking our own experience, vicariously through those with whom we can best share experiences. Most Americans, myself included, have a very hard time imagining what life in Iraq is like, and, fortunately, for good reason. Many Americans have a very easy time imagining what it is or was like to be a college student and, for that reason, they're upset and scared when 31 college students get mowed down by a crazy person. For better or for worse, there is a war going on in Iraq and, last time I checked, much of this country was against it and wants it to stop. Short of full scale revolt against our government, we're doing what we can do to make that happen. People are upset with the fact that people are dying there, but it's been going on for four years and, for purposes of information filtering, we can't report on it like we can a shooting at a college. We EXPECT casualties in a war zone, even if we don't like them. We don't expect casualties when we send ourselves, our siblings, our children to college in suburban Virginia. I don't see what good holding that empathy over people's heads does other than give you the opportunity to have a holier-than-thou moment. |
I was wondering why there were so many campus security people all over today. There was a protest, but it was a small one to have an Asian Studies class added to the curriculum. I've never seen a protest here have a squad car right next to the quad. From what I read on one news site, they were having security everywhere at every campus across the country in case of a copy cat. It's pretty scary to think that this could happen on campus.
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Yes, deaths in Iraq are tragic and senseless. Just like these are. |
Even though I know it will be seen as insensitive, I'm going to try and repeat some of what was in the shoutbox earlier. When I heard the news, my reaction was "big deal". Sure I know it's a terrible thing that happened but it doesn't really affect me.
Then, we get into how it's unreasonable to think that someone could do this to students, but it's reasonable to go in and kill people of a foreign country. Before you start back on the proximity argument and the two different instances argument, it all boils down to the same thing. It's death. Ask the troops over there what they think about it.. they'd probably consider it to be one and the same thing. Who knows how many people die everyday in the ghettos across America. Does it make the paper? No we'd rather wonder who fathered a baby of a pill-popping money hungry slut. Then oh no! We have students that died because some fuck decided he should kill people because his girlfriend didn't give him a blowjob this morning. I find it horribly insensitive to the rest of the people who die without so much of a decent funeral much less a front story of the paper. If you're on the sympathetic bandwagon, then perhaps more should be mentioned about the people who die every fucking day instead of just the ones that die at some school. |
Actually I have talked to some soldiers today, several I know came home right before easter...Marines...their words? "I expect that over there, I dont expect that in the country I serve and our hearts should go out to their families"
Also there have been people that attend VT that had friends that are still IN Iraq call them to pass on their prayers and see how they were. |
gucci, king, etc.
if you're just bitching about the media coverage, then i can understand that a bit. they broke in on jeopardy to do a press conference, and then said some jazz about "we'll be back live tomorrow morning live from the vt campus" and i think there a special night line for it, and all i thought was 'fucking great. i'm sure that's exactly what these people need right now. more fucking cameras.' but that's the way the media works. this has massive concentration of simultaneous death in an american city involving college students. i wouldn't seek learning about this incident, particularly, but if i hear about i'm going to say 'damn, that sucks. i feel awful for them' and if i hear about a bombing in iraq, i think the same thing. i just don't understand the theory of tragedy dillution due to overexposure being a useful reason to negate someone else's response to it. |
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I HATE the fact that people act as if this is some sort of big deal which almost NEVER happens. |
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We think of schools as safety zones, as sanctuaries, yet things like this happen, and there is no denying the horror of it. There is no denying the horror of death, regardless of where it happens or to who, and so there is no point in pointing fingers, because as long as there is still horror in people taking human lives, it is all the same--but that it would happen in a place that we would feel safe--that is what bothers us most of all, I think. I also think we are bothered by the fact that a lot of us either went to college or are college students--and the thought that this could happen to us, at our school--my school is a LOT like VT--that worries me. That worries me a lot. If it can happen at VT...it can happen anywhere. Of course, I thought that after the Kip Kinkel shooting...if it can happen in Springfield, Oregon, it can happen anywhere--and no school is safe anymore. |
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I learned about this when my professor talked about it in class earlier. He had heard that the first shooting (a guy and a girl at around 7am) at the VT dorms was due to a break up.
Whatever caused him to do it, it's sad that he couldn't talk to anyone. |
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No matter what the medium, there is only so much space or time to fit all the day's news in. Even the newspaper can't just go off and print up a 300 page edition on a whim. That means there must be a filtration process. Part of that filtration process is looking for either something out of the ordinary (a common mantra is "dog bits man, no story, man bites dog, there's a story.") or something which effects a large portion of your viewers/readers. One guy getting killed in Philly will be reported on its local news, but it's not going to effect someone in LA, so it probably won't make it out there unless there's an unusual element to it - - and sadly there's nothing unusual anymore about one person getting murdered. Clearly what happened today is tragic - no more or less tragic on a family-by-family basis than any other murder, although I would argue it is far more tragic to the VT community as a whole than a single murder would have been. Clearly as well what happened today is highly unusual - - in fact, a shooting on this scale has never before happened in this country, and that alone makes it news. I mean no offense, but I reject your premise - - -it's very unusual for a murder to not get a mention in the media local to the area the murder happened in. |
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