HesDeltanCaptain wrote:Notice a trend with these mass shootings. Everybody who does them has had some psychiatric issues prior. I'm sure it's true, but the thing seems to be that murder sprees are the result of mental imbalance, not anything to do with the general apathy of our culture and society. Other countries have violent video games same as our's but don't have these kinds of problems. Partly because of differences in gun laws, but moreso because of differences in overall culture. Our's is a very selfish and consumer culture. We want whatever we want, and feel entitled to it. When done to excess this results in criminality since if someone else has something we want, we feel entitled to take it. We then reward such behaviours with fame and notoriety. We all remember the perpetrators of murder sprees, but can we name two or three of the victims? In our youtube society, some feel fame is the most desired thing. Regardless of why you get it.
The problem then may be an ass-backwards society valueing the polar opposite things it shoudl be. And a reinforcing media and pop culture that rewards negative behaviours consciously or not. Throw in psychiatric illness and the stage is set for bad things to happen. For properly functioning minds we know what not to do, even in the face of temptation and positive reinforcement to do them. But a wrong-thinking mind will do them because everything around them is encouraging them to do so.
Cledwyn Bulbs wrote:As for the comment about the lack of people on here, in comparison to the amount of people on other forums championing psychiatric drugs, it is a non sequitur to say that that means there are far more people who find the drugs helpful. This site isn't a barometer of patient opinion about psychiatric drugs. There are tons of people who testify to the suffering these drugs can cause on the internet, it's just that not many people come to this forum, for various reasons.
I agree with this
Anyway, this is a matter of inconsequence, because regardless of what people might think, all beliefs do not occupy a position of equality in relation to each other regarding the degree of truth they contain. People, in their understanding of the world, imitate others (hence why independent thought is such a dubious concept). Specifically, they usually imitate entities more powerful than themselves, such as experts, the herd (see the bandwagon effect), people considered desirable in the context of their culture because of the adulatory gazes that converge on them (such as celebrities and sports stars, even though such people offer little in the way of true understanding of almost anything), and the people who exercise authority over them in relations hierarchically arranged, such as between parent and child, master and slave (and I don't just mean in its literal sense, but am referring to all relations that crystallize around the master-slave dialectic), and psychiatrist and patient (which, of course, overlaps in its nature with the preceding relationship).
HesDeltanCaptain wrote:Notice a trend with these mass shootings. Everybody who does them has had some psychiatric issues prior. I'm sure it's true, but the thing seems to be that murder sprees are the result of mental imbalance, not anything to do with the general apathy of our culture and society. Other countries have violent video games same as our's but don't have these kinds of problems. Partly because of differences in gun laws, but moreso because of differences in overall culture. Our's is a very selfish and consumer culture. We want whatever we want, and feel entitled to it. When done to excess this results in criminality since if someone else has something we want, we feel entitled to take it. We then reward such behaviours with fame and notoriety. We all remember the perpetrators of murder sprees, but can we name two or three of the victims? In our youtube society, some feel fame is the most desired thing. Regardless of why you get it.
The problem then may be an ass-backwards society valueing the polar opposite things it shoudl be. And a reinforcing media and pop culture that rewards negative behaviours consciously or not. Throw in psychiatric illness and the stage is set for bad things to happen. For properly functioning minds we know what not to do, even in the face of temptation and positive reinforcement to do them. But a wrong-thinking mind will do them because everything around them is encouraging them to do so.
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