Monday, April 23, 2007

Guess Who's to Blame for the Virginia Tech Shootings

It's advocates of deinstitutionalization, if you read this in today's Wall Street Journal. After the obligatory shots at 1970s-era deinstitutionalization advocates, the op-ed turns to the Virginia Tech shootings:

Diagnosis from afar is the purview of talk-shows hosts and other charlatans, and I will not attempt to detail the psyche of the Virginia Tech slaughterer. But I will hazard that much of what has been reported about his pre-massacre behavior--prolonged periods of asocial mutism and withdrawal, irrational anger and hatred, bizarre writing and speech--is not at odds with the picture of a fulminating, serious mental disease. And his age falls squarely within the most common period when psychosis blossoms.

No one who knew him seems surprised by what he did. On the contrary, dorm chatter characterized him explicitly as a future school-shooter. One of his professors, the poet Nikki Giovanni, saw him as a disruptive bully and kicked him out of her class. Other teachers viewed him as disturbed and referred him for the ubiquitous "counseling"--an outcome that is ambiguous to the point of meaninglessness and akin to "treatment" for a patient with metastasized cancer.

But even that minimal care wasn't given. The shooter didn't want it and no one tried to force him to get it. While it's been reported that he was involuntarily committed to a "Behavioral Health Center" in December 2005, those reports also say he was released the very next morning. Even if the will to segregate an obvious menace had been in place, the legal mechanisms to provide even temporary "warehousing" were absent. The rest is terrible history.

That is not to say that anyone who pens violence-laden poetry or lets slip the occasional hostile remark should be protectively incarcerated. But when the level of threat rises to college freshmen and faculty prophesying accurately, perhaps we should err on the side of public safety rather than protect individual liberty at all costs.

If the Virginia Tech shooter had been locked up for careful observation in a humane mental hospital, the worst-case scenario would've been a minor league civil liberties goof: an unpleasant semester break for an odd and hostile young misanthrope who might've even have learned to be more polite. Yes, it's possible confinement would've been futile or even stoked his rage. But a third outcome is also possible: Simply getting a patient through a crisis point can prevent disaster, as happens with suicidal people restrained from self-destruction who lose their enthusiasm for repeat performances.


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1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Even if the will to segregate an obvious menace had been in place, the legal mechanisms to provide even temporary "warehousing" were absent."

Phrases like "obvious menace" have led to incredibly subjective actions. To many, any African-American man who is not smiling and wearing a business suit is an "obvious menace".

In todays campus environments, the subjective nature of such views would have 10% of the student body "warehoused" as a safety measure. Let me offer Iraq conflict protesters and the language that was frequently used by the advocates of invading Iraq when discussing those who disagreed with it. Dissenters were frequently labeled "traitors" who were "siding with the terrorists". It's an easy step from "siding with the terrorists" to "obvious menace", allowing the incareration of those who dissent from unpopular wars.

This is not about protecting the campus's of America, it's about fear of mental health disabilities.

9:52 AM  

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