Sixth-grade girl shoots three at Idaho middle school | Idaho | The GuardianThe girl lived in nearby Idaho Falls and has been taken into custody, Anderson said. Authorities did not release her name, and it is unclear what motivated the attack. Sixth-grade students in the US are aged 11 or 12.
Mark Taylor, Jefferson county prosecutor, said the girl may face three counts of attempted murder depending on the outcome of the county’s investigation.
About the latest school shooting:
Sixth-grade girl shoots three at Idaho middle school | Idaho | The Guardian
My first thought:
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In Europe (and many other parts of the world) she'd probably end up in a youth psych facility and get treatment.
I remember watching a documentary years ago about two murder cases with 14-15 year old murderers. The British kids were sent to jail and treated like adults, the Norwegian kids were sent back to school (after psych treatment). This is a highly cultural issue.
It's interesting how minors are perceived depending on their role in a crime. An 11 year old perpetrator might be treated like an adult and a monster while I have repeatedly heard 16 or 17 year old victims of crime called "our babies". It is as if childhood and innocence are so closely interlinked that you lose your child card if you lose that innocence card.
Also, interesting random fact - apparently in Iran the age of criminal responsibility is 15 for boys and 9 for girls!
About the latest school shooting:
Sixth-grade girl shoots three at Idaho middle school | Idaho | The Guardian
My first thought:
![]()
In Europe (and many other parts of the world) she'd probably end up in a youth psych facility and get treatment.
I remember watching a documentary years ago about two murder cases with 14-15 year old murderers. The British kids were sent to jail and treated like adults, the Norwegian kids were sent back to school (after psych treatment). This is a highly cultural issue.
It's interesting how minors are perceived depending on their role in a crime. An 11 year old perpetrator might be treated like an adult and a monster while I have repeatedly heard 16 or 17 year old victims of crime called "our babies". It is as if childhood and innocence are so closely interlinked that you lose your child card if you lose that innocence card.
Also, interesting random fact - apparently in Iran the age of criminal responsibility is 15 for boys and 9 for girls!
I don't think "apartheid state" really embodies what Israel has become. The US needs to cut ties with that poison like yesterday.
Can a youtuber become Governor of California?
He needs at least 4 million votes and he has 1.5 million subscribers but I'm guessing that only around 0.5 to 0.8 million are living in California. I also don't think he'll get any of his agenda passed. If he wins, he'll be a lameduck like Arnold.
I do like the fact that he has new and bold ideas, like getting rid of the income tax for people earning less than $250K, eliminating the DMV, and establishing partnerships between schools and corporations so graduates will be better prepared coming out of high school.
If he decides to run as a Democrat, he may be the first and only Democrat I'll vote for.
The thing about considering how Norway treats crimes versus how other countries punish them is very highly contextual and cultural.
Like I really, really dont think much of the findings from comparative criminology or criminal justice policy are really that transferable.
If you decided to adopt the models of one society with much of the informal, familial, employment, community and other norms to a different society you will either find hardened criminals taking positive advantage of it all, treating it as a weakness rather than a kindness.
The thing about considering how Norway treats crimes versus how other countries punish them is very highly contextual and cultural.
Like I really, really dont think much of the findings from comparative criminology or criminal justice policy are really that transferable.
If you decided to adopt the models of one society with much of the informal, familial, employment, community and other norms to a different society you will either find hardened criminals taking positive advantage of it all, treating it as a weakness rather than a kindness.
I do not have the answers to this and do think that perhaps demography has a massive role to play, ie like what stage attempts at changes are introduced within the "life cycle" of societies, the timing of any attempted social engineering needs to take into account that the "spontaneous order" will be reproducing itself too.
Globalization and online cultures can play a massive role in this too, Norway is probably the most progressive place in the world, its also where the neo-fascist Brevik murdered children in their summer camp, old people in their government offices and did it all while posing as a law enforcement officer in order that his intended victims would run towards him hoping for help and protection. Whether he and his crime was truly "domestic product" or produced by his immersion in an online existence permitting others from elsewhere, ie inhabiting much less progressive societies, to radicalize him I think is a fair question.
The UN recommends a minimum age of 12 but encourages a higher cutoff age. The age in different countries seems to depend more on culture than economic development or social progress. Compare Canada and the USA. Compare the British isles and Germany.
My first thought:
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In Europe (and many other parts of the world) she'd probably end up in a youth psych facility and get treatment.
This evidently is cultural. We can perhaps even speculate about the source.
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We rich people have been falsely persuaded by our schooling and the affirmation of society, and have convinced ourselves, that we are the main job creators. It’s simply not true. There can never be enough super-rich Americans to power a great economy. I earn about 1,000 times the median American annually, but I don’t buy thousands of times more stuff. My family purchased three cars over the past few years, not 3,000. I buy a few pairs of pants and a few shirts a year, just like most American men. I bought two pairs of the fancy wool pants I am wearing as I write, what my partner Mike calls my “manager pants.†I guess I could have bought 1,000 pairs. But why would I? Instead, I sock my extra money away in savings, where it doesn’t do the country much good.
This article is so good. Have you posted it before? It seems familiar.
I liked this.
I am curious:
Trump used to say plenty of anti-NATO stuff in his term. So how much of that sentiment there still seems to be in the party at this point ?
In the GOP? Plenty I would imagine. Any element that supports their victimhood and imagined or unimagined grievances is always a plus for them, doesn't really matter what it is. However, I have a feeling Biden is going to continue the - hey man, you all need to pay your own way - thing. Same as Trump, just more polite.
I am curious:
Trump used to say plenty of anti-NATO stuff in his term. So how much of that sentiment there still seems to be in the party at this point ?
Well, I don't mind the paying part since we need to spend on our own security. Plus nowhere it says how exactly we should spend down to the last detail. I am more after "being anti NATO for the sake of being anti NATO". I presume the establishment didn't fully change their opinion since they know the importance of the alliance. However more populist and average Joe side of the party is what was really under question here. If there is plenty of misinformation going around the base of the party wouldn't really rebound on the topic. What can obviously complicate a lot of things for the country and few other things.
To be honest NATO is supra-national, nationalists are not going to like it anymore than they would the EU, UN, any other trading bloc or international entity.