We Know These Mass Shooters Are Schizophrenic (And Immigrants Are Disproportionately Schizophrenic). Is Suppressing Schizophrenia The Answer?
05/31/2022
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Earlier by Ann Coulter: Register Maniacs, Not Guns: Mental Health Laws Let Loonies Wander Free

For us non-Americans (I live in Finland), the relative frequency of the school shooting phenomenon in the U.S. (notwithstanding mass shootings in Hungerford, Dunblane and Tasmania) is something that we associate with America, like very loud customers or morbid obesity. As early as 2018, South Park made comedic hay with the predictability of American school shooting sprees.

The most recent American shooting was at an elementary school. The cowardly police did nothing to stop it, refusing to intervene themselves and even preventing parents from trying to save their own kids [Onlookers urged police to charge into Texas school, by Jake Bleiberg et al., AP News, May 27, 2022].

Notwithstanding this policing failure, this atrocity  of course led to calls for stricter gun control, with President Biden questioning why anybody should need the kind of military-level gun which the shooter employed. As he visited the school to pay his respects, the crowd impotently chanted “Do Something!” [Crowd calls on Biden to ‘do something’ during visit to Uvalde, Texas, in wake of school shooting, by Associated Press, CBC News, May 29, 2022].

But what should Biden do? Fortunately, there is detailed research on this very subject. In fact, it is surprising that this research has not been mentioned in the Main Stream Media.

Only last year, Prof. Ira Glick, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at Stanford University, and his colleagues published “Domestic Mass Shooters: The Association With Unmedicated and Untreated Psychiatric Illness” in the Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, Jul-Aug 2021.

Their findings provide us with significant hints as to the “something” that should be done by President Biden.

The study aimed to diagnose what had been psychologically wrong with America’s many “Mass Shooters.” As many of these had killed themselves, the researchers had to devise a retrospective study which would allow them to understand the workings of these men’s minds. They limited their study to mass shootings which had occurred in the U.S. between 1982 and 2012 where 4 or more people had been killed and between 2013 and 2019 where 3 or more people had been killed. They employed the Mother Jones database, a database of 115 people identified as having committed a mass shooting, based on these criteria, in the U.S. between January 1982 and September 2019. (The database can be seen hereSteve Sailer described it as a “carefully curated list of the most stereotypical mass shootings,” meaning that it omits random black gunfire with low body counts.)

Here they hit their first problem.

  • “In the vast majority of the incidents identified in the database, the perpetrator died either during or shortly after the crime, leaving little reliable information about their history-especially psychiatric history.”

Accordingly, the researchers focused on the 35 mass shooters who survived and who were duly prosecuted, because with these people there was an abundance of reliable information, such as psychiatric reports.

For each of these 35 mass shootings, they interviewed the forensic psychiatrists and forensic psychologists who had examined the perpetrators after the crime or who had collected the testimony and reports by psychiatrists at trial or in any other legal proceedings.

In addition, they

…reviewed available information from the court proceedings, public records, a videotaped interview of assailant by law enforcement, social media postings of the assailant, and writings of the assailant.

With all of this information, they made formal diagnoses.

After this, 20 further cases where the assailant died at the scene were randomly selected to see whether there were differences in psychiatric diagnoses and treatment between such assailants and those who survived.

So what did they find?

  • Of the 35 cases which met their criteria, they were able to make a clear diagnosis in 28 instances. Of these 28 cases, 18 were diagnosed with schizophrenia; that is 64%, or two thirds.

So, it is only a slight exaggeration to say that the mass shooting problem is a schizophrenia problem.

Schizophrenia affects less than 1 percent of the U.S. population, so, manifestly, the over-representation is enormous. It is characterized by psychosis (a loss of touch with reality and disturbed and disordered thoughts), persecutory and paranoid delusions, hallucinations, and specific negative symptoms such as “impaired emotional expression, decreased speech output, reduced desire to have social contact or to engage in daily activities, and decreased experience of pleasure” [What is Schizophrenia?, American Psychiatric Association, 2022].

Of the remaining one third of cases, to give some examples, three had bipolar disorder. This can involve periods of intense negative feelings, which may be projected outwards. Two had delusional disorders, and one had borderline personality disorder. (This is when, due to fear of abandonment, you lack a clear sense of self and you create an unstable identity in order to cope.)

When this sense of identity—narcissism and the idea that you are perfect is an example—is challenged, then it induces intense fear and rage in you and you may try to find a way to reassert a sense of power and importance. (I have discussed this in more detail in my forthcoming book Spiteful Mutants: Evolution, Sexuality, Religion and Politics in the 21st Century.)

Of the 20 spree killers who died at the scene, eight could be clearly diagnosed with schizophrenia, though, obviously, they offered less information with which to make diagnoses. As the authors note, none of the killers were taking any medication when they committed their acts.

So, in terms of the call to “Do Something” it would seem to follow that this should be assessing children, throughout their childhoods, for signs of schizophrenia.

We all sit on the schizotypy spectrum. A schizoid personality is marked by a lack of interest in social relationships, a tendency toward a solitary lifestyle, secretiveness, emotional coldness, detachment, apathy, anhedonia and stilted speech. Schizotypal personality adds to this thought disorder, paranoia, social anxiety, and unconventional beliefs.

Schizophrenia and other mental disorders all seem to first manifest in late adolescence, with an average age of 19 [Age of Onset of Schizophrenia: Perspectives From Structural Neuroimaging Studies, by Nitin Gogtay et al., Schizophrenia Bulletin, 2011]. They are strongly genetic, but they are also elevated by stress [Schizophrenia in the Spectrum of Gene–Stress Interactions: The FKBP5 Example, by N. Daskalakis & E. Binder, Schizophrenia Bulletin, 2015].

Schizophrenia is elevated among immigrants, something which has been put down to elevated feelings of stress and exclusion [Stigma for common mental disorders in racial minorities and majorities a systematic review and meta-analysis, by O. Eylem et al., BMC Public Health, 2020]. VDARE.com’s Brenda Walker anticipated this in her pathbreaking coverage of what appears to be a unique VDARE.com interest, Immigrant Mass Murder Syndrome.

In light of this, I have a proposal for President Biden which permits Americans to own guns and schools to be schools rather than fortresses: detailed mental health checks for potential gun owners and, further, that nobody under the age of 25 should be allowed to own a gun.

If people are seriously mentally unstable, this will almost certainly have manifested by the age of 25.

In that you cannot purchase alcohol in America until you are 21, I cannot see how 25 is an unreasonable age for owning deadly weapons.

Edward Dutton (email him | Tweet him) is Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at Asbiro University, Lódz, Poland. You can see him on his Jolly Heretic video channels on YouTube and Bitchute. His books are available on his home page here.

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