By Alan Caruba
In April
1999, we were all stunned by the news that Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold had
attacked and killed students at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado
and, more recently, in December 2012, that Adam Lanza, after killing his mother
at home, then massacred twenty-six staff and students at Sandy Hook Elementary
School in Newtown, Connecticut. These events evoke dread of potential events, a
quest to understand why they occurred, and ways to avoid further comparable
killings.
Peter
Langman has authored “School Shooters: Understanding High School, College, and
Adult Perpetrators.” It offers very little comfort, but only because this
psychologist, widely recognized for his expertise, is refreshingly honest.
“Many
people seek to reduce school shootings to a bite-sized explanatory chunk, but
the phenomenon defies easy analysis,” says Langman. “There is no one cause of
school shootings, there is no one intervention that will prevent school
shootings, and there is no one profile of a school shooter.”
He offers
a wealth of information about forty-eight shooters He divides them into
“Psychopathic shooters” whom he describes as “profoundly narcissistic,
arrogant, and entitled; they lacked empathy, and met their needs at other’s
expense” and ”psychotic shooters” who “suffered from schizophrenia or a related
disorder. They were out of touch with reality to varying degrees, experiencing
hallucinations or delusions.”
“Unlike
the psychopathic and psychotic shooters, who generally came from
well-functioning, intact families, traumatized shooters endured chronic abuse
as children. They grew up in violent, severely dysfunctional homes.” Most fell
into the first two categories.
I would
like to offer the reader some comfort that school shooters can be “spotted” in
advance, but in most of the cases that Langman cites, they looked like everyone
else in any school. Only if one of them was to confide his plan was there any
opportunity to intervene and then only if he was reported.
Among the
psychopathic category “at least 75 percent (nine out of twelve) had body
issues. Many of these physical characteristics had a direct bearing on
perceived manliness, including short stature, thin build, chest deformity, and
fear of sterility” leading Langham to suggest a link between feeling weak or damaged
and extreme narcissism. It is widely believed that bullying is linked to these
events, but Langham notes that while about forty percent were harassed only one
targeted a bully. While there is concern these days about bullying in schools,
it is mostly due to a heightened awareness, not because there is more or less
of it than has ever existed.
One thing
does stand out, however, “nearly all shooters had bad educational experiences,
including academic difficulties (failing classes, repeated grades, not
graduating) or disciplinary problems…at least 92 percent had negative academic
or disciplinary experiences.” And then there’s this: “At least 38 percent of
shooters had relatives who worked or volunteered in schools.”
Another
common factor was that “at least half of the perpetrators engaged in substance
abuse (illegal drugs, prescription drugs, or alcohol.) In addition, “at least
42 percent of the shooters had a history of legal troubles, including arrests,
contempt of court, and loss of a driver’s license.”
“Many
shooters had trouble getting or holding jobs.” This was particularly true of
the older shooters. Charles Whitman, an American engineering student at the
University of Texas, gained infamy when in August 1966 he killed his wife and
mother in their homes and later that day went to the Austin campus where he
killed sixteen people and wounded 32 others over the course of ninety minutes,
firing from the observation deck of the main building before being killed by an
Austin police officer.
To
academic and employment problems, add romantic failures. “Most shooters either
failed to establish any romantic or sexual relationships or else suffered
breakups or rejections that contributed to their anguish and anger.”
It should
surprise no one that a number of the shooters “had specific role models for
violence, including serial killers, mass murders, and other school shooters.”
Most of them were psychotic, whereas the psychopaths “felt no need to attach
themselves to a source of power; they were
the source of power.”
Out of this densely documented book
Langham concludes “There is no one way to prevent school shootings.” What also
emerges is the fact that “Most school shooters leave a trail of warning signs
that are either not noticed or not responded to.”
What the shootings are not about is
gun ownership. Many
of the shooters came from families that owned guns and used them for hunting or
sport shooting. They had little reason to regard them as instruments with which
to kill people other than their own twisted psychological interpretation.
What I
came away with was the conclusion that the shooters are people we would all
easily identify as “losers.” Beyond that, there is no specific way of
identifying them, only suspicions of their capability to do the unthinkable.
© Alan
Caruba, 2015
2 comments:
"Most school shooters leave a trail of warning signs that are either not noticed or not responded to."
That is obviously the key. They become increasingly insensitive to what others might think of their obsession(s), thus increasingly unstable and erratic in their self-control in public. They subconsciously WANT to warn everyone that they are going to explode. Invariably, those who do explode do so because those around them were too thick-headed to imagine they would, or too uncertain to know who to tell, and how (the old police line of "we can't do anything until he hurts somebody--and we don't have the manpower to follow him around until he does, even if we wanted to" is a substantial deterrent to informing the authorities).
Sign notifying that there is little risk to terrorists because the zone only contains targets.
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