I watched TV with my friends and tried to find a movie they might like. Unfortunately, children need to go through continuous news channels. At first I passed through the first three channels, but then I noticed that I had a heading saying that the other news channel I accidentally saw was that the school was dismissed. I had no choice but to watch the news in order to understand the situation. I found a lot of kids shot and killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut.
On the surface, the relationship between psychosis and shooting is justified. In most cases, psychiatric disorders are like large-scale public shooting cases, which is becoming an increasing problem in the United States. Nearly a fifth of today's Americans are suffering from mental illness, and over the last two decades mass shooting was more frequent and deadly. However, the media press talks about another. Nearly a quarter of collective gunfighting talks explain perpetrators as psychosis and more than half of news reports on psychosis concern violence. Stories on gun violence and psychosis are often focused on protecting the public from psychosis. They are rarely explained as people who need protection
This is not a matter of guns. We are having mental health problems. The perpetrator of a massive shooting incident in the United States was a patient. If they are not mentally ill, they will not shoot on a large scale. So, we conducted a thorough career survey and established a nationwide healthcare system so that people with mental illness and their families will change somewhat. This is a bit socialist. Also why do my children and I have to pay for the psychosis of some strangers?
What does this say? Well, we usually associate mental illness with violence. it's simple. Of course, when large shots occur to infer that mental illness is a problem, it is a solution to talk about mental health. But friends, this is not easy. Firstly, according to a recent survey, only 1% of large-scale shooting cases occurred in people with serious mental illness, compared to 22% of those who may be suffering from mental illness . :