Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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The Evil/Mental Illness Debate - Beyond Blue
This is about the Virginia Tech massacre but could be applied to many of the other horrible occurrences of late like the CT shooting at the school, the Sikh Temple killings in WI, and the CO movie theater murders. Have watched some of the recent news on the Newtown, CT atrocity and so few times have I heard the words evil or rotten come up. |
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#2
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A people free to choose will always choose peace. ![]() Law of Logical Argument: Anything is possible if you don't know what you are talking about! Since light travels faster than sound, some people appear bright until you hear them speak |
#3
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I see most terrorists like those of 911 as evil and not mentally ill. Timothy McVeigh certainly knew what he was doing with the Oklahoma City bombing. Never recall anyone saying that McVeigh was mentally ill. |
#4
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There is a difference between being mentally ill and not understanding that what you are doing is wrong.
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The Beatlemaniacs of The Villages meet every Friday 10:00am at the O'Dell Recreation Center. "I never considered a difference of opinion in politics, in religion, in philosophy, as cause for withdrawing from a friend." - Thomas Jefferson to William Hamilton, April 22, 1800. |
#5
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Boogie, that is true, lots and lots of folks with mental illness are sane. not knowing you are doing wrong meanson is insane, in other words cannot tell the difference between external reality and a false reality that is in the mind.
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#6
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None of us know. Only God knows.
We are typing, trying to understand all of this horror and trying to make sense of it and place it somewhere in our hearts that doesn't hurt as much. We are battling anger and trying to comprehend this overwhelming reality. It isn't possible. I think turning OFF the news is a good idea. And remembering just ONE name and face of the dead. It seems like better advice than any I've heard.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#7
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I think this is relevant to the thread.
The Seven Myths of Mass Murder By J. Reid Meloy, Ph.D. J. Reid Meloy, Ph.D. is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego, and President of Forensis, Inc., a nonprofit dedicated to forensic psychiatric and psychological research. Myth 2: They can easily be divided into “psychopaths, psychotics, and depressives” David Cullen, the journalist and author of Columbine, an excellent book on the high school mass murder in Colorado in 1999, has asserted this formulation. Unfortunately, his diagnostic classification of mass murderers is much too simplistic. Most are complex in their motivations and psychopathology. They often have both mental and personality disorders. Mental disorders range from chronic psychotic disturbances, such as paranoid schizophrenia diagnosed in the Jared Loughner case, to major depression, bipolar, and other disorders. This may sound like splitting hairs, but when it comes to risk mitigation, fully understanding the range and complexity of these individuals’ disturbances is critical. Personality disorders also abound in this group and are often a mixture of antisocial, paranoid, narcissistic, and schizoid traits — or in layperson’s terms, someone who habitually engages in criminal behavior, is suspicious of others’ actions, is self-centered and grandiose with little empathy, and is chronically indifferent toward others and detached from his emotional life. What Cullen has done is a disservice to the millions of individuals who are clinically depressed or have a psychotic disorder and pose no more risk of violence to others than your neighbor. Loughner has given paranoid schizophrenia a bad name — many other factors contributed to his attempted assassination and mass murder. Myth 5: Psychotic individuals cannot plan in a precise and methodical manner The majority of adult mass murderers are psychotic, meaning they have broken with consensual reality and perceive the world in an idiosyncratic and often paranoid way. Yet they may research the internet for weapons, practice video games to sharpen their marksmanship, purchase weapons and ammunition, conduct surveillance of the target, and carry out their mass murder, all from within a delusion. A delusion is a fixed and false belief and may provide a rock-solid motivation for mass murderers. Paradoxically, delusions may help them commit irrevocably to paths of homicidal destruction. Our research has also found that mass murderers who are psychotic have higher casualty rates than those who are not. Typically they select victims who are complete strangers, who in their minds make up a “pseudocommunity” of persecutors bent on their destruction. The seven myths of mass murder | OUPblog |
#8
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Severe mental illness is difficult to understand, but we should begin with empathy toward the ill and their families...what would you do if you had a severely ill child? Read about this parent's struggle: http://thebluereview.org/i-am-adam-lanzas-mother/
Sent from my Kindle Fire using Tapatalk 2
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"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" --Mary Oliver _______ Cindy formerly of Manhattan and weekends on the Jersey Shore--now living the dream in Caroline! |
#9
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cbg150, I can't get your linked page to load.
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#10
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Article In New York Daily News on Adam Lanza,
People with Asperger's rarely harm others, so don't be so quick to link Adam Lanza's actions with syndrome: expert - NY Daily News There is a big difference between being evil and mentally ill. In a perfect world, I believe that people who are a danger to themselves and society be put in a safe situation before something bad happens. Everyone who is alarmed by someone that might be violent should report their odd behavior as a safeguard to avoid these tragic events. I believe another article said the mother was a gun affecianado and his access to guns was something that added to a lethal mix. I am not a gun advocate and I think access to semi automatic weapons should not be available to the general public. From what I'm reading, one of his weapons was something that you would carry in a military war type situation.
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"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). |
#11
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I'm sorry. I think the website has been overwhelmed. The Huffington Post just reprinted the piece here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...n_2311009.html
It is definitely worth reading, one parent's account of dealing with her emotionally disturbed child...she can be anyone of us... Sent from my KFJWI using Tapatalk 2
__________________
"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" --Mary Oliver _______ Cindy formerly of Manhattan and weekends on the Jersey Shore--now living the dream in Caroline! |
#12
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to the criminal justice system...there should be better alternatives for these parents. Read http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...n_2311009.html for one mother's struggle. Sent from my KFJWI using Tapatalk 2
__________________
"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" --Mary Oliver _______ Cindy formerly of Manhattan and weekends on the Jersey Shore--now living the dream in Caroline! |
#13
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#14
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In almost all of these massacres, the killer was already known by teachers, police, counseling professionals and courts as being mentally ill with probably personality disorders than were pointing toward having schizophrenia or something related to it.
And in almost all these cases, authorities who knew it were in denial for the sake of good P.R. and their institution's image. This CT killer will probably turn out to have a long history of wanting to kill others in grizzly, go-down-in-flames, action-movie ways: "Neighbors have described Lanza as odd, remote, and reclusive ; schoolmates recall him as a brainiac, with a flat affect; and a longtime family friend reveals that Adam lacked the ability to feel pain. His brother, Ryan Lanza, told ABC news that Adam "is autistic, or has Asperger syndrome and a 'personality disorder.'" Police authorities, meanwhile, have alluded to the shooter's "checkered past," calling him a "troubled youth." Greater diagnostic clarity on this matter will emerge within the next few weeks as friends and doctors who knew Adam Lanza come forward to aid law enforcement in their investigation." Diagnosing Adam Lanza - Gabriella Rosen Kellerman - The Atlantic |
#15
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Closed Thread |
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