Search found 1 match

by Killadocg23
Sat Aug 03, 2019 10:02 pm
Forum: The Crime Blotter
Topic: El Paso Walmart Shooting
Replies: 204
Views: 67980

Re: El Paso Walmart Shooting

patterson wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2019 8:08 pm [quote=imkopaka post_id=<a href="tel:1258732">1258732</a> time=<a href="tel:1564878585">1564878585</a> user_id=20015]
[quote=SewTexas post_id=<a href="tel:1258719">1258719</a> time=<a href="tel:1564875095">1564875095</a> user_id=8949]
[quote=03Lightningrocks post_id=<a href="tel:1258717">1258717</a> time=<a href="tel:1564874787">1564874787</a> user_id=3350]
[quote=SewTexas post_id=<a href="tel:1258712">1258712</a> time=<a href="tel:1564872604">1564872604</a> user_id=8949]
this is truly horrifying....how are kids so evil these days?
In my opinion it is a combination of factors. Raised by violent video games and day care. Social media creating a lack of empathy. These kids refer to texting as talking! They all live on social media and begin to see it as real life. Violent TV and Movies. The level of graphic violence this group was raised on is unfathomable.
[/quote]
.
honestly, I think the biggest thing is that kids haven't been raised to value life.
[/quote]

03Lightningrocks, I disagree wholeheartedly. I am part of the same generation, raised playing every type of violent video game from Duke Nukem and Wolfenstein 3d to Call of Duty, Halo, and Doom. I grew up watching violent movies like the Terminator franchise and war movies like Black Hawk Down, Saving Private Ryan, and the Patriot. I also saw disturbing levels of violence during my time in the Marines and as a correctional officer. These things did not turn me into a killer, a monster, or a predator. They did not desensitize me to the suffering of others, even if they desensitized me to the sight of blood. Assuming that these things can turn someone into a psychotic murderer is a harmful stereotype.

The problem as I see it is twofold: as SewTexas states, the first problem is that they do not value life. For one reason or another, they treat other people (or animals) as a possession or an object. They are unwilling or unable to empathize, to feel the pain and experience the fear of others in a way that affects their behavior. The second is that they have no external moral compass. They are accountable to themselves and no one else - there is no one whose opinion they value more than their own, so as their thinking becomes less rational, there is no one capable of convincing them they are wrong. This is one of the greatest gifts of the Bible - it offers the moral compass of an absolute God. No one measures up, and many mistakes and failings occur, but the standard still exists, is always present and never-changing.

Despite growing up in the same generation as this mongrel and being exposed to the same general experiences at roughly the same developmental points, I am not like him. I have experienced enough pain that I actively seek to reduce pain in others so they don't have to feel what I've felt. I have the guidance of the Holy Spirit and the objective truth of the Gospel to tell me when my actions or thoughts are wrong (which they all too frequently are).

Blaming video games for the violent acts of a fully functioning adult who is able to tell fantasy from reality is no different from blaming private gun ownership. Please be careful where you ascribe blame.
[/quote]
Im with you on that Ive played video games all my life and now in my 50s I enjoy playing Call of Duty WW2
[/quote]
patterson wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2019 8:08 pm
imkopaka wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2019 7:29 pm
SewTexas wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2019 6:31 pm
03Lightningrocks wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2019 6:26 pm
SewTexas wrote: Sat Aug 03, 2019 5:50 pm this is truly horrifying....how are kids so evil these days?
In my opinion it is a combination of factors. Raised by violent video games and day care. Social media creating a lack of empathy. These kids refer to texting as talking! They all live on social media and begin to see it as real life. Violent TV and Movies. The level of graphic violence this group was raised on is unfathomable.
.
honestly, I think the biggest thing is that kids haven't been raised to value life.
03Lightningrocks, I disagree wholeheartedly. I am part of the same generation, raised playing every type of violent video game from Duke Nukem and Wolfenstein 3d to Call of Duty, Halo, and Doom. I grew up watching violent movies like the Terminator franchise and war movies like Black Hawk Down, Saving Private Ryan, and the Patriot. I also saw disturbing levels of violence during my time in the Marines and as a correctional officer. These things did not turn me into a killer, a monster, or a predator. They did not desensitize me to the suffering of others, even if they desensitized me to the sight of blood. Assuming that these things can turn someone into a psychotic murderer is a harmful stereotype.

The problem as I see it is twofold: as SewTexas states, the first problem is that they do not value life. For one reason or another, they treat other people (or animals) as a possession or an object. They are unwilling or unable to empathize, to feel the pain and experience the fear of others in a way that affects their behavior. The second is that they have no external moral compass. They are accountable to themselves and no one else - there is no one whose opinion they value more than their own, so as their thinking becomes less rational, there is no one capable of convincing them they are wrong. This is one of the greatest gifts of the Bible - it offers the moral compass of an absolute God. No one measures up, and many mistakes and failings occur, but the standard still exists, is always present and never-changing.

Despite growing up in the same generation as this mongrel and being exposed to the same general experiences at roughly the same developmental points, I am not like him. I have experienced enough pain that I actively seek to reduce pain in others so they don't have to feel what I've felt. I have the guidance of the Holy Spirit and the objective truth of the Gospel to tell me when my actions or thoughts are wrong (which they all too frequently are).

Blaming video games for the violent acts of a fully functioning adult who is able to tell fantasy from reality is no different from blaming private gun ownership. Please be careful where you ascribe blame.
Im with you on that Ive played video games all my life and now in my 50s I enjoy playing Call of Duty WW2
Add me to the list of those that play violent video games and wouldn’t fathom of doing this. It’s definitely not the video games . Obviously this guy agenda was racist based against Hispanics. Idk why even take him into custody just “out” him right there.

Return to “El Paso Walmart Shooting”