I think what\'s bugging me the most about all of this is the media. I\'m 45 minutes south of DC - not really the DC \'burbs, but close enough.
This guy Cho was from the northern VA side of the DC suburbs (VaTech is 4.5 hours from here), so the local DC TV are ALL OVER THIS, a little too much. They haven\'t knocked on Cho\'s parents\' house just yet, and thankfully they are nowhere to be found...
But,
They are all over the TV, showing these gruesome pictures of Cho, all the ones of him aiming his pistols at the camera, his snarling face, the vacant looks/100 yard stare. NBC (and to some extent the other networks - NBC just got the package).
No imagine you ARE affected by this, firsthand, as a lot of VaTech students are from this area, whether you\'re a student, survivor, or a family member with dead/wounded/shell-shocked kids, and have to relive this nightmare of staring down the barrel from your tv, from the restaurant/bar tv, from the airport gate tv. I think it\'s pretty irresponsible for the media to be doing this \"If it bleeds it reads!\" turns into \"If you\'re bleeding, you\'re (now) hemmorhaging\"... All for ratings and advert $$ - something I wouldn\'t want my product associated with/sandwiched between Cho\'s insanity and my neighbor\'s grief.
Then it\'s the really inane side stories, of how all these potential applicants/incoming freshmen all all bailing on VaTech, dropping applications, switching/deferring enrollment; or the one from South Korea, their gov\'t is \'bracing\' for a backlash against Korean-Americans/immigrants, urging Korean students to stcik together.
Instead of (further) demonizing him, maybe TV should be eulogizing students, professors.... Showing pictures of them - what about their dreams, promises? It\'s their faces and lives that should drive future concerns policies on campus safety. Too many concerns about the snarling monsters, not the lives lost (and hopefully saved later)