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Op-Ed: We have studied every mass shooting since 1966. Here’s what we’ve learned about the shooters [LATimes.com]

"First, the vast majority of mass shooters in our study experienced early childhood trauma and exposure to violence at a young age. The nature of their exposure included parental suicide, physical or sexual abuse, neglect, domestic violence..."

https://www.latimes.com/opinio...y-mass-shooters-data
By Jillian Peterson and James Densley, Aug 4, 2019, O-Ed LA Times

In the last week, more than 30 people have died in three separate mass shootings in Gilroy, El Paso and Dayton, Ohio. We believe that analyzing and understanding data about who commits such massacres can help prevent more lives being lost.

For two years, we’ve been studying the life histories of mass shooters in the United States for a project funded by the National Institute of Justice, the research arm of the U.S. Department of Justice. We’ve built a database dating back to 1966 of every mass shooter who shot and killed four or more people in a public place, and every shooting incident at schools, workplaces, and places of worship since 1999. We’ve interviewed incarcerated perpetrators and their families, shooting survivors and first responders. We’ve read media and social media, manifestos, suicide notes, trial transcripts and medical records.

Our goal has been to find new, data-driven pathways for preventing such shootings. Although we haven’t found that mass shooters are all alike, our data do reveal four commonalities among the perpetrators of nearly all the mass shootings we studied.

Please click the hyperlink at the top of the page to read the full Op-Ed.

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Thanks for providing a link to this Op Ed article regarding the profiles of mass shooters and ACES. I'll be using this reference in a post I am currently writing for my blog on the topic of Mass Shootings and ACES. Stay tuned!

Thank you for sharing this LA Times Op-Ed - I appreciate the focus on understanding to inform positive change.  I checked their reference to #nonotoriety  and found the media protocol - seen below. 

Copied from the Op-Ed
Media campaigns like #nonotorietyare helping starve perpetrators of the oxygen of publicity, and technology companies are increasingly being held accountable for facilitating mass violence. 

No Notoriety Media Protocol

Attachments

Images (1)
  • No Notoriety Media Protocol

The #1 problem is the lack of secure attachment.   

When a child is attachment-disordered (due to abuse, neglect, or serial losses) it devastates their ability to connect with others later in life, and erodes their capacity to empathize with human beings -- to feel their humanity.  The neural pathways simply have not been built in a dog-eat-dog childhood.  

Empathic abilities arise out of attachment with the primary caregiver, which teaches the baby (through experiences) that human beings are safe, connective, caring, and can be trusted.   When you fail to attach to a parent, there is a huge cauldron of RAGE from the frustration and pain and unfairness of that.  There is often intense self-blame and self hatred, too ("I am broken and horrible and thats why thy don't love me")  which leads to self-destructiveness,  impulsivity, risk taking, and a sense of fatalism about life.

An attached child is part of the human community.  An attached child has been contained and regulated by a safe loving other until they develop the ability to contain and regulate themselves.  An attached child will experience "people" as safe and caring because their first degree relatives are safe and caring.  

A mal-attached or detached child has none of this ballast, as well as a ton of rage and pain, poor self control, racing thoughts, loneliness, a sense of being flawed and different.  

Its hard to imagine the degree of pain and rage...  But when none of the human kindness that molds and shapes a child has been experienced, there is a huge gap in skills and an enormous pool of rage, where inflicting pain on others seems like it might be "justice."

One thing that really bothers me is that there is a world of, not illegal, yet extremely harmful parenting behaviors and practices that The Los Angeles Times can't measure.  Visit advancingparenting.org to view a list.  Click on The Norms.  Don't these unsupportive, harmful parenting behaviors and practices also twist children into creatures that harm themselves and others?

Last edited by David Dooley
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