Thursday, April 25, 2024

How 9 Things Will Change The Way You Approach Boston Shooting

It’s been a rough year. The Boston Marathon, the shootings in Newtown, and now the Boston Shooting all have us wondering how to stop violence in our society.
But what if there was no way to stop it? What if we have to learn how to live with violence for the foreseeable future?
The one thing we can do about violence, and that is shared by 9 things on this list, is learning how talk about it differently: more honestly and openly.
About Boston Shooting

I’m not talking about a gun ban or stricter punishment. I am talking about what happens when those things don’t work.

Here are 9 positive changes that we have to make if we want to stop violence in this world.

  1. We have to stop treating it as a crime and a sin
    At the end of the day, it’s never the right thing to do, whether it’s an elderly person pulling out or a teenager holding up a bank. But we have to stop treating shooting a person as a crime and shooting a human as a sin.
  2. We have to stop acting like curing violence is a cure-all don’t cure cancer, we manage it. We learn how to live with it. Violence is no different. It’s an ugly reality we are going to have to accept. So let’s manage it like we see fit, instead of trying to cure it.
  3. We have to look at what else is going on with the shooters
    Most violent crimes are not committed by people who suddenly flip out one day and decide to shoot a person. Most violent crimes are committed by people who have endured years of abusive behavior, physical or emotional.
  4. We need to look deeper into why we’re so violent as a society
    We try to come up with reasons for why it’s happening, and pretend that if we could get rid of those things, then shootings will stop. But violence is a part of our society. It’s always been a part of our society. The real debate is whether we should pretend it doesn’t exist, or admit that it exists, and try to do something about it.
  5. We have to agree that there is no magic solution
    We’ve already tried the “lock them up” approach, and the “let’s be more understanding” approach. Boston Shooting Neither of them works 100% of the time.
  6. We have to be honest about the people who are committing violent crimes
    Most of them are not psychopaths, criminally insane, or monsters. They’re often our children, our brothers, and our sisters.
  7. We need to put aside our differences and start working together as a community
    One of the reasons violence is so rampant in society is because we refuse to come together and make a change.
  8. We have to start thinking about whether our personal circle is really an upstanding community
    We’ve been kidding ourselves for so long about the people we surround ourselves with. We’ve lost all perspective and we’re acting like every single person in our lives is trustworthy and okay.
  9. We have to admit that violence isn’t always a result of a bad person, Boston Shooting bad act, or bad circumstance
    Sometimes it’s just random, and sometimes it’s the consequences of what society has pushed us into doing.
  10. We have to admit that violence isn’t always a result of a bad person, bad act, or bad circumstance.
    We’ve been kidding ourselves for so long about the people we surround ourselves with. We’ve lost all perspective and we’re acting like every single person in our lives is trustworthy and okay.
    It’s gotten to the point where we don’t even care if people cheat on their spouses anymore because it’s so “normal” for people to be dishonest. We’re so fed up with violence, we’ll get behind anything as an excuse
    But we have to remember that this is real life and it happens in our lives every single day.
    There are plenty of people who are violent and dishonest people out there, which is why we need to act like they’re not okay with our own morals. My idea of a perfect world would be if everyone was honest with each other and did what they wanted without hurting another person or coming between two people who love each other.
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