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Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

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Re: Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

Finished reading Elliot Rodger's manifesto.

Wow.

It went from easy-going to sad to depressing to extreme evil very quickly. I did feel bad for him, because some of the thoughts he had are ones that I feel almost all people have at points in their lives. Obviously not the ones about murdering and enslaving women, but others about loneliness, being accepted, getting experiences out of life. The problem is most people eventually move past those thoughts, but he obsessed over them, and because of his narcisicism, he always thought he was right. Any attempts anyone made to help him were dismissed because he felt jobs were beneath him, that his way of thinking was the only way of thinking, and he became deranged at the thought he was owed something because he was better than everyone else.

I skimmed through it and was struck by his attitude about his BMW. He was happy to have a better car than most other people his age. But in the next breath allowed that his mother "should" have provided it for him much sooner. As I said earlier, combining his "manifesto" with his last minute video rants gives us a glimpse into the face of madness most of us never see. What's really scary is that he had been seeing mental health professionals for years. Yet, somehow, none of them snapped to the fact that this kid was a ticking time bomb. His parents realized it, too late to stop him.
 
Re: Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

I skimmed through it and was struck by his attitude about his BMW. He was happy to have a better car than most other people his age. But in the next breath allowed that his mother "should" have provided it for him much sooner. As I said earlier, combining his "manifesto" with his last minute video rants gives us a glimpse into the face of madness most of us never see. What's really scary is that he had been seeing mental health professionals for years. Yet, somehow, none of them snapped to the fact that this kid was a ticking time bomb. His parents realized it, too late to stop him.

And as much as I'm in favor for stronger background checks into purchasing guns and what-not, he purchased at least one, perhaps two (I can't recall) before his parents even had him see a psychologist, so only police intervention, which was literally on his front steps, would have helped.

It's amazing how many downward spirals his life took. I think there were about 10 times he said "I decided to try one more time" to make himself happy and it got more extreme each time. It went from going to college to try to meet people, to purchasing the newest clothes/laptops/cars so he could attract people through items, and then he got addicted to the lottery, even going as far as driving to Arizona to play powerball before it was available in California because he figured becoming a youthful millionaire was the only way he could attract girls to like him.

I couldn't imagine thinking those thoughts for years on end. You'd figured he would snap out of it after awhile but I guess there always has to be extremes on the spectrum.
 
I skimmed through it and was struck by his attitude about his BMW. He was happy to have a better car than most other people his age. But in the next breath allowed that his mother "should" have provided it for him much sooner. As I said earlier, combining his "manifesto" with his last minute video rants gives us a glimpse into the face of madness most of us never see. What's really scary is that he had been seeing mental health professionals for years. Yet, somehow, none of them snapped to the fact that this kid was a ticking time bomb. His parents realized it, too late to stop him.

What a little pr**ck.

All I ever wanted was to fit in and live a happy life amongst humanity, but I was cast out and rejected, forced to endure an existence of loneliness and insignificance, all because the females of the human species were incapable of seeing the value in me

Too good for the Sconnie method of happiness? A neighborhood deer?

Edit 1: I see this kid has a decent vocabulary and is a decent writer but for whatever reason ends every other effing sentence with a preposition. FFS.
 
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Re: Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

And as much as I'm in favor for stronger background checks into purchasing guns and what-not, he purchased at least one, perhaps two (I can't recall) before his parents even had him see a psychologist, so only police intervention, which was literally on his front steps, would have helped.

It's amazing how many downward spirals his life took. I think there were about 10 times he said "I decided to try one more time" to make himself happy and it got more extreme each time. It went from going to college to try to meet people, to purchasing the newest clothes/laptops/cars so he could attract people through items, and then he got addicted to the lottery, even going as far as driving to Arizona to play powerball before it was available in California because he figured becoming a youthful millionaire was the only way he could attract girls to like him.

I couldn't imagine thinking those thoughts for years on end. You'd figured he would snap out of it after awhile but I guess there always has to be extremes on the spectrum.

It's my understanding he'd been seeing "professionals" virtually all of his life.
 
Re: Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

The death penalty is not good enough and there are not enough levels of hell for this POS. :mad:

Ted Poe is a Houston area congressman. As a young Harris County prosecutor, according to the legend, he once told a jury that it should sentence the defendant to death by lethal injection. . .and the guy should be dug up every 5 years for a booster shot.
 
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Re: Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

Yeah, a mentally disturbed individual with combat training brandishing a gun around the cops. Good way to get killed if you ask me.
 
Re: Nice Plant #7: Get me off of this planet

Science project leads to felony charges for Florida high school student

http://universalfreepress.com/zero-...e-experiment-yields-two-felonies-for-student/

Bartow High School principal Ron Pritchard described Kiara as a “good kid” who has never been in trouble before, “ever.” In spite of his positive view of the teen and conceding that she didn’t mean any harm to anybody by performing the experiment, Pritchard expelled her anyways to send a message that the school’s zero tolerance policies would be enforced at all times.
 
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