Wow that poor girl. What a crazy 24 hours for her! |
He was not a good shooter. Otherwise he could kill or injure 10s or 100s people. Is this a hate crime? |
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| Burke is a vocally progressive school. I’m going to bet that he purposely targeted it for ideological reasons. He was Red Pill’d. |
That's just heartbreaking. So many of these police killings are of people experiencing a major mental episode. This is just awful. |
She left him on the street knowing he was having a break down. Did she call anyone for help? Would the police have responded differently if they had already received information about his mental state? |
Fox clickbait. The young woman provided zero insight into the EBS shooting. |
I disagree. This shows that there are likely federal investigators checking for any connections between her boyfriend and the shooter since she lived next door. For all we know, her boyfriend could have known the shooter and that’s how he found the apartment in January 2022. |
| Bets on that apartment building being contaminated with black toxic mold...that stuff can really mess up your mind. |
And it affects people within 3 months? Doesn’t make sense. Plenty of professionals live in those apartments and they don’t break into people’s houses or shoot up a school. |
I do not either. Anger + male toxicity is not mental illness. It is entitlement. |
Sigh. |
99.9% of crime would disappear if there were no men. |
Now THIS is interesting. At least as a medical professional. Assuming it is the same person - he swam laps and developed BPPV (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo). This happens to swimmers but it's not that common, meaning not every swimmer is going to experience it. The easiest way to prevent it is by having the swimmer finish their laps with a backstroke or any other swimming motion that keeps their head in a fixed position. As a doctor, I want to know if it was his first time experiencing BPPV or vertigo of any kind. What was his follow-up like? Did doctors explore his neurological health and look for any underlying conditions? A bout of vertigo + drowning + no oxygen for a bit = should have had an extensive neurological workup with testing. Of course, an ER can only make recommendations and it's on the patient to book those follow up appointments. |