Editorial: Looking for answersbyEditorial: Looking for answers Date: Oct 4, 2006 9:43 AM PUBLICATION: The Chronicle-Herald DATE: 2006.10.04 SECTION: Editorial PAGE: A8 WORD COUNT: 436 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- Looking for answers ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- HOW do you rationalize the irrational? How do you prevent the seemingly unpreventable? Based on what's known, it is difficult to fathom how anyone could have predicted the horrific slaughter of innocent Amish schoolgirls in Pennsylvania by a lone gunman on Monday morning. The killer, who then took his own life, was a 32-year-year-old lifelong Christian with no criminal record or outstanding warrants, no history of mental illness and no connection with, or known complaint against, the Amish. Charles Carl Roberts, in fact, was described by those who knew him as a churchgoing, hardworking, normally jovial milk truck driver, and by his wife as a loving husband and caring father of three young children. Something obviously snapped within Roberts. His last conversation with his wife, by cellphone while barricaded inside the school, along with suicide notes he left at home, together pointed to a 20-year-old memory of molesting young girls and a desire to do so again. Roberts apparently was also still angry over the death of an infant daughter nine years ago. The grisly result was the planned siege of a one-room schoolhouse close to his home - picked, apparently, for its proximity, vulnerability and availability of intended targets - which left five Amish girls dead and five more in hospital, four in critical condition, with gunshot wounds to the head and back. All had been separated from classmates, bound and shot at close range. None, however, were sexually assaulted. The Pennsylvania school shootings were the third in a week in the U.S., and come not long after a lone gunman stormed Dawson College in Montreal, killing one student and injuring 20 more. Federal U.S. authorities are now planning a summit on school violence for next week, when education and law enforcement officials will discuss ways to help communities prevent violence, as well as deal with its results. It's a worthy initiative and hopefully some practical ideas will emerge, but short of draconian measures, schools - like so many other avenues of our daily lives - can never be made 100 per cent safe from people like Roberts. Many criticize the media's massive coverage of such incidents, saying it inspires others to commit similar crimes. But not reporting is not a realistic, nor a desirable, option, either. Sometimes there is no truly effective societal response, or defence, against monstrous acts of aggression like these. The tragedy is that the innocent almost always pay the price. Goto Forum Home |
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