To further the understanding of the underlying root causes of these events, and to confirm whether or not contagion truly plays a role, an official comprehensive detailed, accurate, and publicly available federal database of incidents of all mass killings and school shootings in the US is necessary. A database that includes, at a minimum, details on the background events, mental health status and access to mental health treatment of the perpetrators, exactly what kinds of weapons were used, where the perpetrators obtained their weapons, and whether they did so legally or illegally. Several studies of firearm violence over the past decade have pointed out the need for such a database (see, for instance, References [46, 47]). For the time being, while waiting for such a database to become available, studies such as this must use what data are available, paying attention to cross-checks of the robustness of the modeling methodology to potential biases, as we have attempted to do here.
Studies into the prevention of such tragedies are also hampered by the freeze on federal funding for research into gun violence in the United States, put in place by Congress in 1997 [48, 49]. In January, 2013, President Obama issued a presidential memorandum directing the Centers for Disease Control to resume studies into firearm violence. However, at the time of this writing in September 2014, the majority of members of Congress have vowed to continue to block allocation of federal funding to the studies. In the near term it thus appears that federal legislation will not be put forward to address the need for the documentation and detailed study of such events.
where do you stand now — T Clark
Two things surprised me 1) the venom with which conservative essayists hated Summerhill and its ideals and 2) the extent to which the liberal writers understated the radical nature of what Neill had done. — T Clark
Summerhill used to be famous. Now most people haven't heard of it. Had you heard of it before. — T Clark
I have trouble following what you mean here. — Agustino
What were the slaves used for? What kind of work did they do? And why didn't earlier peoples, which were arguably a lot better organised than the European countries at that time (thinking now about the Roman Empire) make use of slaves and achieve a scientific revolution? — Agustino
China also happened to be the world's largest economy for much of world history. But at the same time, they did not learn how to make use of natural resources on an industrial scale and in a scientific way in the manner, Western Europeans did during and before the Enlightenment. Why didn't they? What made this "scientific revolution" possible in Europe? — Agustino
British people never treated me very well because I was a foreigner — Agustino
the just society seeks to promote the unique strengths of each individual, rather than seeking conformity. — Metaphysician Undercover
My guess is that if any of the other races got ahold of technological superiority first and learned to exploit fossil fuels and other natural resources, they would have subjugated the rest of the world themselves, and would have justified it in similar ways. What do you reckon? — Agustino
those years are long gone now! I really think we have moved beyond that, especially with the internet and the ease of access people now have to others of different nationalities, skin colors, and to knowledge as well. — Agustino
So a professor getting fired based on skin color isn't a serious case of racism? — Agustino
Of course, if you listen to people like unenlightened, if you're white, you don't have to worry about being picked on with regards to your skin color on the street... except if you happen to live in Pakistan, or you go through the wrong neighbourhood, etc. — Agustino
The way you presented it is certainly propagandistic.
— Agustino
And that is true, because it turns out, by your own comments, that the program barely mentions Trump. — Agustino
So... let's see. Trump barely gets mentioned, but this documentary is supposed to "explain the place of Trump. — Agustino
Never have so many free individuals felt so helpless – so desperate to take back control from anyone they can blame for their feeling of having lost it. It should not be surprising that we have seen an exponential rise in hatred of minorities, the main pathology induced by political and economic shocks. These apparent racists and misogynists have clearly suffered silently for a long time from what Albert Camus called “an autointoxication – the evil secretion, in a sealed vessel, of prolonged impotence”. It was this gangrenous ressentiment, festering for so long in places such as the Daily Mail and Fox News, that erupted volcanically with Trump’s victory.
↪unenlightened Of course, but why speak of roses, when truly it is the giving to another person that provides the greatest rewards? Are we just not restating the Golden Rule? — Hanover
The more likes, the more worthy the object. There is an inherent emptiness in this, a lack of relatedness, or substance that despite the fact that we are dynamic, active, energetic and doing things, all of it is really nothing. — TimeLine
Is it possible for wisdom not to lead to success though? — Agustino
Along with success comes a reputation for wisdom. — My fortune cookie
I'm not sure that the presence of awareness makes sense without having had any of the constitutive experiences of awareness ever. — fdrake
What causes violence within the individual? — Anthony
My position is that we do not believe that there are patterns in reality because we apply an inductive method.
But rather that we see and become certain of the patterns themselves. — Banno
we are also free to use the words however we like. — Metaphysician Undercover
So you don't think that the will is free? You believe that we learn by being indoctrinated rather than through the will to understand? If we learn by understanding, then those principles must be justified or else they would not be understood. If we learn by being indoctrinated then the principles are accepted as necessary without being understood. — Metaphysician Undercover
So it's self-evident to those who see it as self-evident, and not self-evident to those who do not see it as self-evident. — Metaphysician Undercover
But there will always be those children, or speakers of different languages, who do not see it as self-evident, so the self-evident will always need to be justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
