Essay On Columbine Shooting

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Marissa Miller Mr. Bertelsen English III 07 February 2016 Media Coverage Causes Copycat Shootings “I know we're gonna have followers because we're so f*****g godlike.”[1] Dylan Klebold would have been disappointed to learn that his plan (formulated with his buddy, Eric Harris) to blow up his school – an attempt to one up the Oklahoma City Bombing in 1995 – was a bust. In fact, it would likely enrage the two gunmen to know that the Columbine massacre is regarded as a “school shooting”. However, Dylan was right about one thing: he and Eric Harris have, alarmingly, garnered a following since they executed the bloodiest high school shooting in America’s history. Investigations conducted by many different sources all seem to come to one conclusion: …show more content…

Many aspiring school-shooters revere Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold as brave anti-heroes. They are seen as two poor, miserable souls who committed such violent acts as a symbol of vengeance. Evidence produced by the FBI and other threat-assessment experts find that most high-risk individuals aspire to emulate Harris and Klebold, in something of an act of admiration.[4] Columbine has become a symbol of retribution and martyrdom among would-be imitators, says Jeff Gammage in an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer. [5] A single shooting event that happened almost twenty years ago is not enough to fuel two decades’ worth of shootings, however. Not all blame can be laid upon the tragedy in Littleton. In fact, evidence has proven that mass-killings involving firearms are incented by similar events before it, one study finds. The “contagious” period lasts just short of two weeks–thirteen days, approximately–in which each shooting increases the chance of another happening by thirty percent. If four shootings were to happen within the same period of thirteen days, there would be an almost guarantee of a fifth to happen. …show more content…

Investigations of such behavioral patterns have conclusively found news coverage of such suicides to be an important factor. Young adults tend to be affected by such a phenomena up to four times that of any other age group. The investigation found that the less publicized a suicide is, the less amount of copycat suicides take place. [8] Additionally, some social psychologists comment that it would not be much of a stretch to say that a similar pattern happens in regards to copycat homicide. Proper media coverage has been one of the most popular plans of action in order to combat the threat of homicidal contagion. A day after the SPU shooting in 2014, Anderson Cooper stated that “We don’t use the names of shooters on this program because we don’t think they should get publicity. I don’t think people should remember their names. I always think people should remember the names of people like Paul Lee, who died.” while interviewing Seattle’s Mayor. Paul Lee was a student who sacrificed his life in order to subdue the shooter.

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