After poking his head several times in the room, Cho looked around and entered another room. The first shot was asked in the hall of the hydrological school. It sounds like a nailing machine or a hit concrete block. Suddenly, people can hear the pin fall. Suddenly the classroom door suddenly exploded, Cho entered and raised the Glock 9 mm pistol. (Friedman) "When I was bullied, I knew where anger came from and what I wanted to kill someone," said 14-year-old Stefan Baron.
Bullying is difficult to verify, but it is related to shooting at several schools in the United States. According to Izzy Kalman nationally accredited school psychologist, school shooters are not shooting a lot of bullies, they feel a sacrifice, want to take revenge, as if they are right or wrong They are committing themselves. Perhaps most surprisingly, 54% of school shooters are bullied and harassed by other students. They are not bullying their victims. This is also apparent in the case of Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris. Originally Klebold and Harris were suspected being bullied for information gained from a diary held by one of the shooters, but Klebold and Harris were determined not to be bullied but to be bullied by others.
School bullying is related to school shooting, and the majority of students (87%) believe shootings are direct retaliation against bullying. School shooters being bullied by the evidence are Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold (a perpetrator of the Colombane High School Massacre), Nathan Ferris, Edmer Apare Sid Freitas, Brian Head, Seung Hui Cho, Wellington Menezs Oliveira, Kim Vijir, Carl Pearson and Jeff Ways. This article combines sentences of free content. It is licensed under CC-BY-SA IGO 0. License Statement: School Violence and Bullying: Global Status Report, 17, 29-31, UNESCO, UNESCO. For details on how to add UNESCO Open License Text to Wikipedia articles, see "Wikipedia: Adding Open License Text to Wikipedia". For reuse of Wikipedia text, please refer to the terms of service.
Over the years, the bullying prevention group has established a relationship of bullying and shooting at school. The Stopbullying.gov website of the Ministry of Health and Human Services reported that 12 out of 15 school shootings in the 1990s were bullied. An eyewitness photographed at Sparks Middle School in Nevada in 2013 said that a 12-year-old shooter told a group of students that he said "I ruined you because you ruined my life" I remembered. School shooting may diverge other important factors such as mental health and access to weapons. Last year's Washington Post article summarized such criticisms. "We all want to find a simple motive: when children go to hurt school, the problem of blaming school 'bullying' is to escape it. Difficult, easy. "