Menandore;259630 said:
The guns are not the root cause of school shootings. People are. More specifically, people with serious mental problems are the root cause.
The number of school shootings has risen partly because of copy-catting and partly because schools are relatively undefended locations with a large amount of people staying in a few spots and familiar lay-outs to the shooters. They want to do as much damage as they can and lash out at what's making them angry. Schools are a great place to accomplish those goals.
I do not think that there's much of a desensitization effect at work here. I think that the shooters are mostly aware of what they're doing and the implications of such. That's why they tend to kill themselves after they're done shooting others.
Nequam said:
Very few kids are obviously going to be killers when they're little, but if we get a significantly larger percentage the help, training and medication they need at earlier ages, events like this will not be happening that often. There'll be less of other kinds of problems too.
Filing cabinet? We've got computer databases these days. I'm generally against the increasing surveillance of people, but having gun background checks hook into current lists of those diagnosed with and undergoing or have undergone treatment for mental illnesses is a great idea. There could be a "Do Not Sell" list and a "Sell Only With Long Waiting Period/Proof of Treatment" list.
It's not going to catch everybody, but it should cut down on these occurrences. The last couple of school shootings have been committed by adults. This last one, the shooter had a gun license and two guns for a while, then went and bought two more guns a week before the shooting. There's not a whole lot we can do about something like that, but try to catch those with these problems along with everybody else with problems while they're young.
Like Skywalker said, there's a tendency to just plop the kid on some drugs and leave it at that. Coping skills and actually teaching people how to proactively deal with stress, their emotions and their lives are harder to teach and thus not used as often.
"Kazmierczak spent more than a year at a Chicago psychiatric treatment center called Thresholds-Mary Hill House in the late 1990s, former house manager Louise Gbadamashi told the Associated Press. She said his parents placed him after high school because he had become "unruly" at home. She also said he used to cut himself for attention."
When the symptom of a problem goes away, people assume that the problem itself has gone away.