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U.S. Shootings: Why They Killed

- An Alabama man goes on killing spree at the start of last week. At least 9 dead.

- Another man barges into a birthday party at the end of the same week on Sunday, the 15th of March, shoots his separated wife and three others to death, then kills himself. 4 dead.

It’s not the dead count that matters as much as the reason killings happen. People kill for different reasons. For fun (kicks), for revenge, out of frustration, hunger for power, need to dominate, proving their supremacy (to others, to themselves).

Now, why did they do it? The two killers from last week. Lets us try to get into their minds. Could be they were genuinely hurt by the world, or it could be that they were genuine psychopaths; either way, it’s a screwed up world we’re living in.

Alabama’s Michael McLendon went on rampage across two Alabama counties, burning his mother's house down and shooting strangers before killing himself. In all, he killed nine victims, including four members of his family. He had apparently gone to the metal plant, where he once worked, to do some more shooting as he had plenty of ammo with him.

Now, McLendon obviously wanted to cause maximum damage, what with all the ammo and guns he had with him. It’s a fair guess that he had just lost his mind. He couldn’t take it anymore; the frustration, the need to get back at society for messing around with him. Ditto for the birthday party shooter from early Sunday, who, like McLendon, killed himself after his killing spree. They both came from underprivileged working backgrounds - Mclendon was a metal plant worker and the birthday man was a cook turned electrician - and both had a disturbed family life. They had similar lives that ended similarly. You might say that I’m reading too much between the lines, but I see a pattern there.

People need affection and understanding from the family, and acceptance and appreciation from the society. You don’t kill your family members unless you’ve completely lost faith in humanity. Society functions as a whole and it has its own way of screwing up certain people who behave out of line. Those who refuse to play by the society’s stupid rules get pushed into a corner, where they can only implode or explode.

Regardless of what the religious gurus and doyens of justice tell you, killing for revenge or out of frustration is understandable. I say that because we, the humans, are a screwed up race to begin with, and one is tested to the extremes in this most stupid world of them all sometimes.

And we are screwed up majorly due to the machinations and manipulations of those who govern the society. Of course, their motivation in governing society is two-fold; A. to make sure humans, being the animals that they are inside, don’t start running amuck and wipe each other out, and B. to attain their psychopathic selfish ends.

The doyens of society, since they have to keep the masses civil in order to rule over them, have fed a few fears in people; three to be precise. Fear of God, fear of police and fear of society itself. God to control people’s wayward motivations, their inner actions or morals; and police to control their physical actions. And everyone has to conform to the society's customs, beliefs and conventions for the masses to stay disciplined and for the chieftains to continue to rule.

Their propagandas work with the masses majority of the times, but, once in a while, it’s only natural for some wayward human beings to go astray, and stay out of the grip of police, too, for a space of time. And this is the time when violence takes place; when individuals somehow break free of direct and indirect behavioral bounds.

By Harpreet Bhagrath

The writer is the Chief Editor at themoneytimes.com and can be contacted at editor@trustsquare.net Or harpreet10jan@hotmail.com

Killing nature to be controlled

This kind of killing nature in mind of the people affects the peace of the country.So it must be controlled.

The Analysis

Great job. I agree with pretty much everything that you said. I like how you compared between the two shootings drawing up comparisons and contrasts. I think it is a genuine job that has been produced.

V for Victory!

Thanks for the positive

Thanks for the positive feedback V. I appreciate your taking time to read through the whole blog. Cheers.

You could've said more about

You could've said more about the ways in which society produces the frustrations that lead to homicide, and you could've acknowledged that not all killers are "wayward" before the act, but other than that, a solid piece.

I did think of touching a

I did think of touching a bit more on that, Bob, but decided against it (time constraints actually). Reading your comment has only made me realize I should have done a bit more thinking and writing on this blog entry. Prolly I'll be working on your suggestions soon as I find some time for it. Thanks for your constructive criticism anyway.

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