Anonymous wrote:I was just thinking the other day about poor Scott Peterson. That handsome, darling man who got railroaded into marriage and family by that little harlot. I can't help think about how we could have helped him. Where was the village when this poor poor man fell from grace?
Anonymous wrote:Those family pictures of the brothers were interesting. Tamerlan was a sweet baby once. The whole scenario is outrageous and tragic. For everyone. And I have news for those who continue to denigrate the sympathy for Dzhokhar --There are many who feel this sympathy. This sentiment will continue to build. Many people want to make sure this kid didn't get railroaded into a crime not of his making. Many want his rights to be assured as the US citizen he is. There is more to the story than we know.
Anonymous wrote:If anything, I feel worse for an individual like Adam Lanza. He could not help his mental condition, it was literally outside his control. Of course, he does not have to live with the consequences of his actions as the Boston bomber will. But I cannot imagine the anguish and torment that Lanza must have lived with that caused him to kill little children, his mother , and himself.
I just threw up a little.
But seriously, there are personality types that do not feel remorse or anguish.
Anonymous wrote:Those family pictures of the brothers were interesting. Tamerlan was a sweet baby once. The whole scenario is outrageous and tragic. For everyone. And I have news for those who continue to denigrate the sympathy for Dzhokhar --There are many who feel this sympathy. This sentiment will continue to build. Many people want to make sure this kid didn't get railroaded into a crime not of his making. Many want his rights to be assured as the US citizen he is. There is more to the story than we know.
Those family pictures of the brothers were interesting. Tamerlan was a sweet baby once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also feel sadness for Dzhokhar. I also felt sadness for Lee Boyd Malvo, Dylan Klebold, Sam Manzie (http://www.nytimes.com/1999/08/08/nyregion/eddie-was-murdered-sam-s-doing-70-years-but-who-is-to-blame.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm), Seung-Hui Cho, and even Jeffrey Dahmer, who, as a child, had selective mutism and collected road kill and kept the bones of the dead animals displayed on poles in his backyard. There could not have been more obvious signs of a problem, and no one helped.
It saddens me that in so many of these tragic cases there were signs that people ignored and that help wasn't available for the mentally unstable who eventually became murderers. But sometimes even when family and friends try to get help for their loved ones, nothing is done (Sam Manzie being the best example of this I can think of in recent history).
It's not to say that I can't understand the outrage that some feel when hearing people express sympathy for the perpetrators. It just that I feel it is somewhat necessary to feel sadness for them, because the ability to realize that we may not know the whole picture, and that we are so very fortunate that it wasn't our son or nephew doing the killing - that perspective is what keeps us human and it's what will hopefully help us spot the next one before it's too late.
Bleeding heart drivel, makes me want to hurl. Wake.up.
You are sad. So, so, sad. All of this saddens you. Well guess what? It makes me so &*(()(*& angry that I would be happy to execute the death penalty on them myself. And I am not "so very fortunate" that it was not my son or nephew who did the killing. You see, it would never be my son or nephew, because people in my family are not raised by mothers who steal merchandise from department stores, fathers who abandon the family and people who think it's cool and OK to be on public assistance for years.
I'm sad foe YOU. I hope you get help for your anger problem. It's not healthy to be so hostile toward compete strangers just because they have a different opinion than you. And I also hope that your pride doesn't come before a fall, since you're so confident that it could never happen to your family.
Only someone with a brain as soft as yours would read anger at another poster into this. If you would get off of your shrink's couch and read this again, the PP said that s/he is angry at the KILLERS. Not the PPs who have different opinions.
Yet you have to resort to insults to get your point across. So much anger and hostility. Thanks for illustrating my point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also feel sadness for Dzhokhar. I also felt sadness for Lee Boyd Malvo, Dylan Klebold, Sam Manzie (http://www.nytimes.com/1999/08/08/nyregion/eddie-was-murdered-sam-s-doing-70-years-but-who-is-to-blame.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm), Seung-Hui Cho, and even Jeffrey Dahmer, who, as a child, had selective mutism and collected road kill and kept the bones of the dead animals displayed on poles in his backyard. There could not have been more obvious signs of a problem, and no one helped.
It saddens me that in so many of these tragic cases there were signs that people ignored and that help wasn't available for the mentally unstable who eventually became murderers. But sometimes even when family and friends try to get help for their loved ones, nothing is done (Sam Manzie being the best example of this I can think of in recent history).
It's not to say that I can't understand the outrage that some feel when hearing people express sympathy for the perpetrators. It just that I feel it is somewhat necessary to feel sadness for them, because the ability to realize that we may not know the whole picture, and that we are so very fortunate that it wasn't our son or nephew doing the killing - that perspective is what keeps us human and it's what will hopefully help us spot the next one before it's too late.
Bleeding heart drivel, makes me want to hurl. Wake.up.
You are sad. So, so, sad. All of this saddens you. Well guess what? It makes me so &*(()(*& angry that I would be happy to execute the death penalty on them myself. And I am not "so very fortunate" that it was not my son or nephew who did the killing. You see, it would never be my son or nephew, because people in my family are not raised by mothers who steal merchandise from department stores, fathers who abandon the family and people who think it's cool and OK to be on public assistance for years.
I'm sad foe YOU. I hope you get help for your anger problem. It's not healthy to be so hostile toward compete strangers just because they have a different opinion than you. And I also hope that your pride doesn't come before a fall, since you're so confident that it could never happen to your family.
Only someone with a brain as soft as yours would read anger at another poster into this. If you would get off of your shrink's couch and read this again, the PP said that s/he is angry at the KILLERS. Not the PPs who have different opinions.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I felt EXACTLY the same about Lee Malvo and the snipers so it is not race (nice try, Mr. or Ms. Racecard).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also feel sadness for Dzhokhar. I also felt sadness for Lee Boyd Malvo, Dylan Klebold, Sam Manzie (http://www.nytimes.com/1999/08/08/nyregion/eddie-was-murdered-sam-s-doing-70-years-but-who-is-to-blame.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm), Seung-Hui Cho, and even Jeffrey Dahmer, who, as a child, had selective mutism and collected road kill and kept the bones of the dead animals displayed on poles in his backyard. There could not have been more obvious signs of a problem, and no one helped.
It saddens me that in so many of these tragic cases there were signs that people ignored and that help wasn't available for the mentally unstable who eventually became murderers. But sometimes even when family and friends try to get help for their loved ones, nothing is done (Sam Manzie being the best example of this I can think of in recent history).
It's not to say that I can't understand the outrage that some feel when hearing people express sympathy for the perpetrators. It just that I feel it is somewhat necessary to feel sadness for them, because the ability to realize that we may not know the whole picture, and that we are so very fortunate that it wasn't our son or nephew doing the killing - that perspective is what keeps us human and it's what will hopefully help us spot the next one before it's too late.
Bleeding heart drivel, makes me want to hurl. Wake.up.
You are sad. So, so, sad. All of this saddens you. Well guess what? It makes me so &*(()(*& angry that I would be happy to execute the death penalty on them myself. And I am not "so very fortunate" that it was not my son or nephew who did the killing. You see, it would never be my son or nephew, because people in my family are not raised by mothers who steal merchandise from department stores, fathers who abandon the family and people who think it's cool and OK to be on public assistance for years.
I'm sad foe YOU. I hope you get help for your anger problem. It's not healthy to be so hostile toward compete strangers just because they have a different opinion than you. And I also hope that your pride doesn't come before a fall, since you're so confident that it could never happen to your family.