|
#171
●
04-08-2023, 03:21 PM
|
|
Re: Full Police Video of the Nashville Shooter
Just my two cents, but I think the lower levels were the actual church rooms and there’s even a door that says, “Church Office.” I believe the classrooms were actually upstairs on the 2nd or 3rd level.
|
|
#173
●
04-09-2023, 07:30 AM
| ||||||||
| So Fucking Banned Poster Rank:1463 Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 394 Mentioned: 1 Post(s) Quoted: 163 Post(s)
| ||||||||
|
Re: Full Police Video of the Nashville Shooter
Well, at least they got to be the good guys for a couple days. Too bad a police union exec was just busted for importing fentanyl. The ones at the bottom are beating up def guys while the ones at the top are competing with the mexican cartels. All cops are always bastards. |
|
#176
●
04-10-2023, 05:40 PM
| ||||||||
| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2559 Join Date: Apr 2014 Posts: 168 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 67 Post(s)
| ||||||||
|
Re: Full Police Video of the Nashville Shooter
I think it's less about the shooters and more about their portrayal. In weird counter-culture sects of the populace, they... weren't quite "anti-heros" but they were sort of victims themselves? There was even a movie i watched in 2005 called Heart of America which is a dramatized, fictional school shooting that spends 90% of the movie showing the shooters being beaten. And the climax of the movie is a scene in the bathroom, shooter holding up his bully, repeating taunting lines that were said to him earlier in the movie, and compares himself to a beaten dog before shooting. The movie is good for a low budget film, but it goes to show how for a long while, some people tried blurring the line. I think that whole "trying to understand them" angle is part of the problem. The wrong people have found shooters relatable... Not only that, and not to get political beyond necessity, but I believe the progressive approach to "tolerance" and "acceptance" is part of the problem. We spend so much time telling everyone that they should always be accepted and tolerated, and that they are a victim for not being tolerated... that we forget to spend equal time trying to teach them that they don't need to be accepted to be okay. I think that's an oversimplification of a much deeper issue, but I think it's a huge factor. Regardless whether anyone agrees with those specific aspects of culture, I think it's indisputably a cultural issue, not a gun problem. If you were to drop a million guns in Chicago, half the city would off one another. If you dropped the same million guns in Tokyo or Auckland, I would bet my house and every dollar I ever earn that the results would be exponentially lower. |