Gun crimes in schools happen elsewhere besides the United States. This appears to continue to happen around the world. Most recently coming to mind is the Canada incident and now this.
Lesson to parents: beat your kids until they have friends and don't give them guns. Seriously though, do you think video games and TV do have an impact on some kids' lives that contribute to incidents like this? I think you'd have to be naive to say that they don't; but is it worth banning them for the fucked up few?
I'm sure there are more incentive-driven rather than prohibitive measures to be taken to prevent things like this from persistently happening. It's obviously not a cultural American problem but rather a worldwide social problem.
A masked, 18-year-old gunman stormed his former high school in northwestern Germany Monday, shooting five people and setting off smoke bombs before he was found dead with pipe bombs strapped to his body, police said.
Witnesses said the gunman _ identified by Germany media and witnesses as Sebastian Bosse _ parked his car nearby the school in Emsdetten, near the Dutch border, and opened fire as soon as he entered the school yard. He wounded five people and sent students running in all directions.
Witnesses said the gunman _ identified by Germany media and witnesses as Sebastian Bosse _ parked his car nearby the school in Emsdetten, near the Dutch border, and opened fire as soon as he entered the school yard. He wounded five people and sent students running in all directions.
Students at the school said Bosse was an aloof individual who played violent computer games and had said he wanted to join the army.
Katja Weber, a 17-year-old student at the school, said he always wore a black hat and coat. "He was an absolute loner," Weber told reporters outside the school. "Guns were his hobby."
Katja Weber, a 17-year-old student at the school, said he always wore a black hat and coat. "He was an absolute loner," Weber told reporters outside the school. "Guns were his hobby."
I'm sure there are more incentive-driven rather than prohibitive measures to be taken to prevent things like this from persistently happening. It's obviously not a cultural American problem but rather a worldwide social problem.
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