All of the data coming out of the Virginia Tech tragedy tells us that this Cho Seung-Hui bastard was not just a loner and one of “those kids,” but that he also had a history of mental illness. So after 32 innocent people – including a heroic Holocaust survivor – are dead at this madman’s hands – who is to blame?
You know what? From what I can see, no one is to blame except the rotten bastard that was Cho Seung-Hui.
Sure, he shouldn’t have been allowed to live in the general public of Virginia Tech and we can see that using our hindsight as 20/20. But what do you do in a liberal, permissive society that doesn’t want to call a spade a spade? Fifty years ago in the United States of America, this scoundrel would have been marked as a mentally deranged individual and he would have been ostracized from the general public. Not today!
Not today. Not in the liberal, politically correct country that we live in today. There was a time when a guy could write evil plays in school, have his teachers tell their superiors that the kid was a threat to society, and the kid would be removed from society! But we can’t do that any more in America because we don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings these days.
And no, the American country isn’t to blame. And despite what Rosie O’Donnell says, it’s not the fault that this kid was able to get a gun legally. The problem in this case was that our system in America has created situations where kids are allowed to fall through the cracks and then be left alone in the interest of diversity.
Seriously…32 dead at Virgina Tech less than a decade after more than a dozen dead at Columbine and our stupid scumbag leaders STILL won’t stand up and say, “What the fuck happened in this country?!?” Where is the leader who will say, “If you’re singled out time and time again as a person who is of great danger to your surroundings – we’re putting you in a padded room and getting you mental health!”???
What the fuck is so wrong about telling someone the truth these days? Damn it!
And what does our permissive society yield? Thirty-two completely innocent people who are shot and killed in a place that should be a sanctuary and a bastion of learning and improvement. As a staunch supporter of the college life and the college atmosphere, this tragedy shocks me to the bone. I have a younger brother who is college age and may decide to attend college one day. I advise hundreds of guys throughout New Jersey who – believe it or not – I think about and am concerned about every single day.
I remember going to high school the day after the Columbine massacre and making sure that the doors to all of the classrooms were closed and locked (if possible). It was frightening. Now I – and anyone else who has any connection to any college campus across America – have had that fear spread to the university level.
It’s sad and it’s sickening.