Outside Opinion On America's Shooting?

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Joccaren

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Mar 29, 2011
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Australia.
People know about it, I don't know how 'cause I don't watch the news or read newspapers, I found out about it online.
Beyond being recognised as a sad event, I'm not too sure anyone over here cares. For me at least its not really news. The US had another shooting? Am I meant to be surprised?
Don't get me wrong, its tragic and all and there's little you can really do at this point to fix that sort of thing, but this sort of thing IS going to happen with the loose gun laws over there.
 

Olas

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Dec 24, 2011
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Ryotknife said:
OlasDAlmighty said:
Of course this chart leaves out Mexico which has 3x the murder rate of the United States, but this is due to drug wars being waged in the country and not ordinary crime, therefore it's best we not include it. We all know the homicide rate in the United States is disproportionately high for a country of it's status. Of course other variables factor into it as well, but to say there isn't a correlation between guns and gun related homicide is just stupid.
Then can you explain why most of the dangerous cities in the US are in states with strict gun control laws?

http://www.neighborhoodscout.com/neighborhoods/crime-rates/top100dangerous/
Yes I can. For starters guns are frequently trafficked over state lines, which is one of the problems with making gun control a state issue rather than a federal issue.
Here you can see exactly which states export the most 'crime guns'. You can clearly see from it that the states with the fewest gun control laws also export the most weapons, and vice versa states with tighter gun control tend to import the most guns.

http://www.tracetheguns.org/#

But back to your point.
It seems rational to assume a states gun control laws are made in reaction to how much violence already occurs there, so the fact that states with more homicides have stricter gun laws makes sense. However, since there are many other factors that can affect a cities violence, attempting to compare states/cites like this is almost futile.
To get a more meaningful statistic we'd need to increase or decrease the gun control of a state and see if that affects the frequency of crimes that occur within it.
 

Dakkagor

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Sep 5, 2011
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In the UK here. Amongst my friends any real anger is directed at the NRA and various lobby groups that seem determined to keep guns in circulation in the US. The cultural problem seems simple from here: you regard yourself as a nation of go-getting individualists so when someone falls of the rails as this poor boy obviously did before the massacre, no one is willing to help pick up the pieces of his life. Who knows if decent care in the community might have prevented the massacres at Aurora and here?

Either way, it wasn't really a major piece of news, if it hadn't been a slow news day I would be surprised if it had made the front pages. Everyone just kind of expects this from the US now, sad to say.
 

Casual Shinji

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Denamic said:
Meanwhile, elsewhere in the world, child soldiers are shot to death while other children are starving to death. I'm not sure why I should be upset because people got killed in America.
Are we really going to pull this "overrated tragedy" bullcrap everytime something bad happens that's not in a third world country?
 

Denamic

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Casual Shinji said:
Denamic said:
Meanwhile, elsewhere in the world, child soldiers are shot to death while other children are starving to death. I'm not sure why I should be upset because people got killed in America.
Are we really going to pull this "overrated tragedy" bullcrap everytime something bad happens that's not in a third world country?
I don't have enough time to be depressed about tragedies on the other side of the planet. As a rule of thumb: If no one I care about is involved, it's unlikely I'll care about it. And why does it matter if it's in a third world country or not? Why should I care more about what happens in America than what happens in Africa?
 

Casual Shinji

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Denamic said:
Casual Shinji said:
Denamic said:
Meanwhile, elsewhere in the world, child soldiers are shot to death while other children are starving to death. I'm not sure why I should be upset because people got killed in America.
Are we really going to pull this "overrated tragedy" bullcrap everytime something bad happens that's not in a third world country?
I don't have enough time to be depressed about tragedies on the other side of the planet. As a rule of thumb: If no one I care about is involved, it's unlikely I'll care about it. And why does it matter if it's in a third world country or not? Why should I care more about what happens in America than what happens in Africa?
You shouldn't care more.

But whenever something bad happens in America or Europe, there's always this attempt by people to hang third world misery over it in order to invalidate the current tragedy.
 

Denamic

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Casual Shinji said:
You shouldn't care more.

But whenever something bad happens in America or Europe, there's always this attempt by people to hang third world misery over it in order to invalidate the current tragedy.
Invalidate?
That's not what I'm doing. It is a tragedy to be sure; I just don't really care about it. In fact, I doubt most people who has no connection to it actually does. People will comment about how sad they are about tragedies like this, then promptly laugh at a bad joke, or switch subject to more pressing concerns like the recent weather. That's not caring.

Hundreds and thousands of people die daily. In fact, over 6000 people die daily only in America. Does this news cause overwhelming depression in you? Probably not. They're just numbers, because you have no personal connection to these numbers. Some people dying in a shooting barely even registers.

It would be different if it happened in my proximity, or if it involved or affected people that I care about.
 

Casual Shinji

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Denamic said:
Casual Shinji said:
You shouldn't care more.

But whenever something bad happens in America or Europe, there's always this attempt by people to hang third world misery over it in order to invalidate the current tragedy.
Invalidate?
That's not what I'm doing. It is a tragedy to be sure; I just don't really care about it. In fact, I doubt most people who has no connection to it actually does. People will comment about how sad they are about tragedies like this, then promptly laugh at a bad joke, or switch subject to more pressing concerns like the recent weather. That's not caring.

Hundreds and thousands of people die daily. In fact, over 6000 people die daily only in America. Does this news cause overwhelming depression in you? Probably not. They're just numbers, because you have no personal connection to these numbers. Some people dying in a shooting barely even registers.

It would be different if it happened in my proximity, or if it involved or affected people that I care about.
There's the issue of context though.

I know thousands of people die everyday, but there's a difference between people dying of a heart attack and people dying in a plane crash because maintenace cut corners.
 

M920CAIN

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May 24, 2011
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Poindexter said:
As many of you may or may not know we had a shooting in the US in Connecticut. For those outside of United States, what did you hear, what did you think, and what did the media show you?
What I'm going to say will sound rude, but I have the Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw cynical approach to things... I enjoy the show and be glad that I'm not the only one having a rough time in life... of course shootings and senseless deaths are awful... but think about it? it's business as usual. Just because it happened in America it's special. What about all the other bad shit in the world? Irak, Afghanistan, Africa, China, etc... lots of people dying all around. Who's president is mourning for them?
 

Starik20X6

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Oct 28, 2009
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Australian.

A lot of stuff in the newspaper and on TV. And all I can do is sit here and shake my head in disbelief. I wonder if this will be the long overdue wakeup call that maybe, just maybe, having so many guns around isn't the greatest idea. Because I'm growing tired of the constant cycle of stupidity. "Oh no! Some asshole shot a lot of people! If only something could have been done to prevent this tragedy!" Funny thing is though, something could very easily be done, but nobody seems willing to do anything about it.

Story time! In 1996, a man went berserk in Tasmania and committed one of the most brutal mass shootings the world has ever seen [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Arthur_massacre_(Australia)]. Our government realised "we need to do something about this" and do you know what? They fucking did something about it. And as a result? There's been, let me check, one [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monash_University_shooting] "mass shooting" (if you can even call it that, the gunman's kill count was a whopping 2) since. After tightening gun laws, we had one mass shooting, in almost 17 years. Seems like the U.S. is lucky to go 17 weeks without one.

Moral of the story? You can fix this, but you won't. And it saddens and scares me that none of the tragedies that have occurred have been enough to cause any kind of real action to be taken to prevent it from happening again. What's it going to take?
 

Varis

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Feb 24, 2012
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In Finland, there was a few papers that told about it, as well as the news in TV.
Certainly fk'd up stuff. I think there was a thread here about people screaming blood and murder on the Mass Effect facebook -page and blaming that the game was somehow related to the incident, although they still defend gun laws when it comes to that... Certainly fk'd up stuff.
 

Enverex

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Oct 6, 2010
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Britfag here. No-one really cares (myself and the people I know). Behaviour like this has come to be expected of the USA and we all know that because of "the constitushun" they'll never change anything so it'll keep happening.

You may be dead, but at least you died free, right? I guess that's all that counts.
 

Poindexter

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Nov 13, 2011
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M920CAIN said:
Poindexter said:
As many of you may or may not know we had a shooting in the US in Connecticut. For those outside of United States, what did you hear, what did you think, and what did the media show you?
What I'm going to say will sound rude, but I have the Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw cynical approach to things... I enjoy the show and be glad that I'm not the only one having a rough time in life... of course shootings and senseless deaths are awful... but think about it? it's business as usual. Just because it happened in America it's special. What about all the other bad shit in the world? Irak, Afghanistan, Africa, China, etc... lots of people dying all around. Who's president is mourning for them?
I never said we were special. I merely asked what the exposure of this incident was outside of the States. Also, its Iraq.
 

WhiteFangofWhoa

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Canadian here, saw it in the newspaper and then on TV, seemingly nonstop coverage because no one wants to seem insensitive to the 2nd-worst school shooting in American history. The paper included background stories on each of the fallen, and it was heartbreaking. They never specified Adam Lanza's age so I had assumed he was an adult, which somehow made his decision to target an elementary school even more baffling than it already was.

A lot of angry rhetoric followed in the paper, lots of commentators talking about how it's a sign that it's time for stricter gun control laws and how any politician who doesn't go along with this is more concerned about their position than helping anyone. Seemed pretty crass to me, like the blood hasn't even had time to dry before the politicking starts. But no, we already have someone claiming this happened because you don't allow prayer in school and another saying it's because your president is in favour of gay rights. There isn't enough facepalm in the world...

Thing is, I'm not sure it would help. We need the full story of why exactly the Lanza family had an assault rifle in their home before any attempt is made to restrict gun sales (of course the argument the NRA/GOP lobbyists will make is that Obama, or whoever proposed this theoretical bill, is trying to shut down more businesses during a recession).

Not only because of them, but for the sake of people who need their weapons to feel safe from criminals, I think baby steps would be appropriate in this case as opposed to the sweeping reforms and reimbursements I've seen people in my country screaming for. Certainly ban the sale of assault weapons to anyone not in the army, or even better ban the sale of all guns to civilians who lack hunting licenses (and even then they only get a rifle). You can't go around ripping the existing weapons out of people's hands- that would only spark more incidents like this. Your right to bear arms was originally tabled so that the people could defend themselves against the British army during the war. Not so anyone with a beef could go on a shooting spree. Just saying.
 

M920CAIN

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May 24, 2011
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Poindexter said:
M920CAIN said:
Poindexter said:
As many of you may or may not know we had a shooting in the US in Connecticut. For those outside of United States, what did you hear, what did you think, and what did the media show you?
What I'm going to say will sound rude, but I have the Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw cynical approach to things... I enjoy the show and be glad that I'm not the only one having a rough time in life... of course shootings and senseless deaths are awful... but think about it? it's business as usual. Just because it happened in America it's special. What about all the other bad shit in the world? Irak, Afghanistan, Africa, China, etc... lots of people dying all around. Who's president is mourning for them?
I never said we were special. I merely asked what the exposure of this incident was outside of the States. Also, its Iraq.
In your country you write "Iraq", in mine we write "Irak" so don't be a grammar na-si for nothing. Don't get me wrong now, not tryin' to start a debate about America's place in the world, I'm just saying that bad shit is bad shit and the shootings you had in your country aren't on other's people agenda in mine for example.
 

IgnisInCaelum

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Feb 2, 2011
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It's nice to see that most everyone from the rest of the world who's interested in commenting on such matters is as much of an anti-gun crazy as the anti-gun crazies we have here in the U.S. I wouldn't want to feel like I lived in the *only* nation capable of gross ignorance, failure to think, and arguments made as knee-jerk reactions. I also have to wonder if there's a bit of the hate-EA^H^HUSA-because-it's-cool thing in here, too, though that could just as easily be lumped in with the knee-jerk gun hatred.

Let's look at some statements/arguments:
1. "Your stats/charts/whatever are bunk because there's information missing or provide a view of the available data that doesn't seem to support my point." This likes to be accompanied by stats/charts/whatever that have information missing because it doesn't suit the person making this argument. What? Why do you people get to decide which overly-simplistic view of information based on only two values (estimated number of guns in a country, gun-related deaths/crimes, average shoe size) is more valid than another? In the case (in this thread) from which I take this point, I see a favorite argument of gun-loving types (some of whom are, I'll admit, a bit more excitable on some matters than they should be) and a favorite argument of gun-hating types. Both consider very little and try to make the issue look like something even now we in the U.S. would expect our middle school students to be able to determine the obvious solution to. One graph won't prove that sane legislation (that's actually enforced, this time, just for the lulz and novelty factor) wouldn't help matters here (it would). One chart won't prove that an immediate gun ban would be an effective and reasonable thing to do (it wouldn't).

2. "I don't care about anything, normal people shouldn't be allowed to have guns!" Ha ha. Go find a soldier or police officer who's authorized to have firearms and ask where he/she gained the super-human ability to be a sane, responsible human. The millions of gun owners who haven't killed anyone yet eagerly await this knowledge and fear that any day they may all just completely snap due to the soul-crushing challenge of not loading a gun and shooting people with it. I'm actually starting to feel bad for you people; you must be in a rather sad state given how strongly you seem to believe that you can't be trusted to not promptly murder someone given a lump of metal that you associate with an opportunity to do so. Maybe I'm just projecting my opinion of myself (I've been around firearms and other things that would terrify many who've posted to this thread for most of my life, so I'm not inherently afraid of such things) onto humanity as a whole, but I have to believe that more than a few of us are capable of independent thought and responsibility. Instead of demanding that someone (government, law enforcement) come hold our hands and take away all responsibility for everything, I assert that we should demand of ourselves true independent, critical thought and a strong will to assume and enforce responsibility. As I see it, if we're inherently as feeble as some of you seem to believe then there's really no hope for us at all and we're going to remain largely a flock of timid and industrious animals.
2b. Also note that criminals have that ability. They just don't use it, so once everyone's disarmed we'll have lots of nice little defenseless victims and plenty of guns still going around (and we would; even the anti-gun types who have any sanity at all recognize that they won't all just vanish overnight) to ensure that law-abiding citizens are extra vulnerable. Admittedly, this is an argument that's used a lot by pro-gun types. Does anyone argue against it? What do unarmed people in regions with strict gun control laws do if someone who is armed breaks into their homes or otherwise attacks them/their family/their property? (Honest questions; I'm not here to be a parrot or troll. I really think that more honest argument would do the world a heap of good.)

3. "With loose gun control laws, you had it coming!" Oh, you're completely right! Let me just go fix that now and by the end of the week everything will be perfect over here. Only *you* will still have people getting shot, stabbed, beaten, etc. And you'll have it coming because you don't have a ban on limbs (arms, legs) and teeth (those can draw blood, you know!)! Don't worry about the fact that even your current laws haven't solved your problems or the fact that practically everything is a least a little different there than its counterpart is here. (I'd love to make a bigger point of this, but there's already a lot of crap to not want to read so just... realize for yourself that laws, rules, and customs that work (maybe even rather well, I don't know) for a place inhabited by folk who'd wet themselves at the sight of a pellet gun may not be appropriate for a place inhabited by people who think that firing a Desert Eagle (.50, naturally, for maximum manliness) is a manlier way to stress one's wrist than, well, whatever else one might think of that doesn't involve an even sillier gun.

4. "Oooh, guns are so scary and bad, make them go away!" Go change your pants and let the grown-ups do the bickering? Fear(/emotion in general) is an excellent reason to back off and let people who are prepared to think rather than feel handle rule-making, at least at high levels such as, say, the federal level in a nation full of people who mostly *don't* kill each other. Again, we're not you and we're not all the feeble-minded drooling idiots some of you seem to think all humans (or, uh, "normal people") are. Proper education, upbringing, and socialization into a society that isn't utterly nuts (this last bit being where the real problems come from) would enable a much safer world than even what the anti-gun crazies who've had their way live in.

4a. "Zomg assault rifles! Automatic weapons! You're all crazy!" Yep, totally, we've all got assault rifles on gun racks in our huge, jacked-up, four-wheel-drive pickup trucks. And by that I mean SARCASM, SARCASM, when was the last time there was *correct* news about a civilian using an *actual* automatic weapon or, by any meaningful definition, assault weapon? Semi-automatic firearms are hardly special here or in practically any context other than, judging by the amount of fear, civilian ownership in heavily "gun controlled" areas. Fully automatic firearms aren't what these people are using and are rarely in the hands of civilians anyway. In truth, this is a non-issue raised by the same terrified sheep as those spouting #4. Both have no merit at all and can be discarded without losing useful information.

4b. "Zomg, think of the children!" Yes, think of them. Think of how likely they are to end up committing crimes possibly just like this one because A. guns are like the One Ring but without having to be worn to subvert individuals' wills or B. something's broken in our society and instead of doing something about it we're all attacking people and organizations that weren't responsible for it at all, pointing fingers and filing law suits like life is easy and we can just make all of the difficulty, the hard choices, and the tough problems go away by accusing somebody else of being at fault. We can't. If we ever collectively grow up and stop running frantically away from reality we'll likely make surprising progress.

---Counter arguments/statements over. Pointy points follow.
On gun hate: Guns don't make reasonable people angry, homicidal, depressed, or much of anything else. A lot of anti-gun types live in countries with firearms licenses and armed police (though not necessarily all police in any given country are armed, I know). Do those people go mad and gun others down because the guns tell them to? If so, I'd expect you to realize that those people were *mentally ill* to begin with. Do people get angry and hurt others there? Of course they do. This leads into what *I* think is the gorilla bouncing around the room while people ignore or otherwise fail to notice it in favor of the papier-mâché elephant they've constructed:

Society: Cue immediate mindless attacks due to comments about societal faults being immediately considered the worthless rantings of an angry youth, or whatever exactly people think that leads to this issue rarely if ever being discussed. Why do anti-gun types think we still have so many guns? Do they all honestly think that the guns are just magically making us crazy ( and stupid, and fat... or are those due to other things that just happen to be convenient targets?) without any other influences on the matter at all? I have a hard time believing that anyone can be dense enough to think that guns are the only things that affect people. Surely even the most thick-headed troll of a U.S./gun hater realizes that a lot goes into any given person's behavior. To be honest, it's incredibly irritating to find that every time a "shooting" occurs here our media makes a big fuss and a whole load of people here and abroad feel compelled to attack U.S. gun laws and gun ownership(/owners) for having guns simply because they in some cases take part in symptoms that even these attackers themselves share. Wherever these people are, they have shootings, they have stabbings, they... apparently want to work toward putting everyone into straitjackets and padded cells so that, no matter what, no one can hurt anyone else? What other logical conclusion is there to the path of taking away everything that can be used as a weapon? Meanwhile, the point has seemingly eluded everyone: weapons aren't the problem. The problem is with the *people.* The straitjacket comment is based on this: people will hate and hurt as long as there's an opportunity for them to. If there's a will and a way, it'll happen. Taking away the ways is ridiculous, especially in the case of a country in which the citizens together own more weaponry than some armies. "Shootings" have apparently become part of the culture here, they're in the minds of everyone, so that's what people do when they snap. Thus...

Big, shiny point: What we (all, not just those of us in the U.S., apparently many of whom are still quite capable of both owning guns and *not* killing people with them... at the same time!) need to do is deal with the actual problems, rather than just whining about the symptoms and attacking each other (or in this case, mostly just us) for having them. Instead of removing everything in the world to attack the ways of harming people, we must target the source of the *will* to harm people. As previously pointed out in one of the few posts here with much thought visibly put into it (thanks so much, Athinira), it's not possible to stop these individuals (considered as a group) who spontaneously decide to shoot up(/stab/otherwise harm people at) a school or mall or whatever. The commonalities that can be exploited to maximize prevention (a worthy aim; the need to increase response effectiveness shouldn't be taken as a lack of need to also improve prevention) are, again, the will and the ways. The ways are numerous (guns, knives, bits of pipe or wood, vehicles, bare hands can all be used to harm people) and even in areas with strict weapon control laws (within the U.S. and abroad) the weapons don't vanish because some people want them to (and being on the Internet, we should all know well that things don't go away just because people want them to). The will seems to come from only a few sources, most of which are considered illnesses. Particularly in the case of social illnesses, it seems appropriate to examine society for signs of flaws that could lead to people unwillfully being (or feeling) excluded from it and possibly becoming socially ill and potentially dangerous. Dealing with such flaws, should they be found (as I think an honest look would do) will require societal change.

Society affects all of us, probably more than most acknowledge. Where do people get their ideas regarding guns, shootings, stabbings, etc.? I hope you said "other people!" Now, why? What governs the interactions between people and how they perceive themselves in relation to each other and to society or the world in general? This type and degree of influence makes it a difficult thing to affect, I admit. Good solutions won't come through brute force, forcing things on people or taking things away. Unfortunately, the hard way *is* the correct way forward. We've got to all work together to make *our* world, our societies decent, reasonable things to be part of. I assert that too little is being done to produce and support a population comprised of thoughtful folk who demonstrate their vested interest in the health of their societies if not in the welfare of others around them. Further, until such behavior is natural there *will* be shootings, stabbings, beatings, suicides, and various other sorts of unpleasant things.

TL;DR: Guns don't make people hurt people. If anything, society combined with social illness (this being, I think, the major targetable source of violence) makes people hurt people. People hurting other people isn't only a problem in the U.S. There's no real correlation between gun ownership and murder rates (the real symptom; people like to argue about firearms-related deaths or crime even when it's merely replaced by deaths/crime using other weapons or tools) while there are obvious social and economic issues that can and do lead to serious issues. Issues that can lead to people "snapping" and going off like the various people we hear about shooting people though they were known the have issues or be likely to have them. The correct way to handle this is to build a society that is more effectively inclusive and less conducive to real violence.

Notes:
-By "socially ill" here, I refer to the condition of a person who has significant difficulty interacting with or taking part in his or her associated society (in this context, really any society the person could participate in and thus develop socially and emotionally in a healthy manner).
--
Apologies for a bit of a rant that may not be the best-constructed wall of text on the Internet. I'll likely not be producing another one on this matter any time soon; I simply felt that there's been far too much missing of important points in favor of shoddy, parroted bickering between sides. We don't need sides, we need solutions... to real problems, not imaginary ones.
 

The Nossa

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Jan 25, 2011
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Australia ere'

It was on the News briefly, story told and regarded as horrific; then overshadowed by the gun laws debate. However, on talk shows they've been going in depth about the incident discussing mental issues and the like.