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 Nineteen years of Columbine

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PostSubject: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 02, 2018 1:28 pm

Every year, on or around the first of March, I start a new thread to mark the passage of yet another year since NBK.

Today is March 2, 2018, so here we are. The nineteenth anniversary is coming up.

This was last year's thread:
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Eric, Dylan, and twelve of their victims have now been dead longer than they were alive. Only Dave Sanders has not yet reached that milestone:
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If they were still alive, many if not most of them would now have kids and careers. Some of them would have kids old enough to attend high school. Hell, some of them might even have *grandkids*.

Kids who were not yet born on 4/20 are now attending college.

Time marches on.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 02, 2018 1:51 pm

It is a very sad thing to think about. So many lives were cut short before they really had a chance to start. Sad
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 02, 2018 1:55 pm

Also how many lives were affected. It’s such a ripple effect.

I still remember where I was that day and how I felt. Honestly and my family and friends don’t understand why, Columbine can bring me to tears in about two seconds even more than anything about 9/11 which is more of a national tragedy as a while.

I’m debating if there any public memorial services if I should go. I’ll be living in Denver then but I always feel weird being at the memorial because I didn’t know anyone personally. And I keep thinking of what Devon wrote about it not being a national tragedy but only theirs

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 02, 2018 2:01 pm

Screamingophelia wrote:
Also how many lives were affected. It’s such a ripple effect.

I still remember where I was that day and how I felt. Honestly and my family and friends don’t understand why,  Columbine can bring me to tears in about two seconds even more than anything about 9/11 which is more of a national tragedy as a while.

I’m debating if there any public memorial services if I should go. I’ll be living in Denver then  but I always feel weird being at the memorial because I didn’t know anyone personally. And I keep thinking of what Devon wrote about it not being a national tragedy but only theirs


Sadly their tragedy keeps being repeated. Sad
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 02, 2018 2:09 pm

ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Screamingophelia wrote:
Also how many lives were affected. It’s such a ripple effect.

I still remember where I was that day and how I felt. Honestly and my family and friends don’t understand why,  Columbine can bring me to tears in about two seconds even more than anything about 9/11 which is more of a national tragedy as a while.

I’m debating if there any public memorial services if I should go. I’ll be living in Denver then  but I always feel weird being at the memorial because I didn’t know anyone personally. And I keep thinking of what Devon wrote about it not being a national tragedy but only theirs


Sadly their tragedy keeps being repeated. Sad

It does Sad Crying or Very sad
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 02, 2018 5:23 pm

Virginia Tech had more of an impact on me and even then it's been 11 years since I saw the news coverage surrounding the case.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 06, 2018 1:44 pm

On this day nineteen years ago - Saturday, March 6, 1999 - Eric and Dylan went shooting at Rampart Range with Mark Manes and Jessica Miklich.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 06, 2018 4:28 pm

LPorter101 wrote:
On this day nineteen years ago - Saturday, March 6, 1999 - Eric and Dylan went shooting at Rampart Range with Mark Manes and Jessica Miklich.


The memories of that day has probably played through Mark, Phil, and Jessica's minds over and over.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 4:44 am

Feels like yesterday that it was ten years since Columbine. And now we're so close to twenty years. Madness!
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 4:50 am

I remember reading the "Thirteen Years of Columbine" thread.

I'm so old. Sad
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 1:21 pm

04daviszoe wrote:
I remember reading the "Thirteen Years of Columbine" thread.

I'm so old. Sad

I remember being thirteen years old when Columbine happened ... I was in eighth grade.

Time flies.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 1:22 pm

I was 17 and in 12th grade...

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 2:02 pm

I hadn't even been born yet.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 5:03 pm

LPorter101 wrote:
04daviszoe wrote:
I remember reading the "Thirteen Years of Columbine" thread.

I'm so old. Sad

I remember being thirteen years old when Columbine happened ... I was in eighth grade.

Time flies.

Me too, I was 13 when it happened. Impressionable age. I think you had to have been at high school for it to have had such an impact. It's a generational thing.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 5:08 pm

macks_ant86 wrote:
LPorter101 wrote:
04daviszoe wrote:
I remember reading the "Thirteen Years of Columbine" thread.

I'm so old. Sad

I remember being thirteen years old when Columbine happened ... I was in eighth grade.

Time flies.

Me too, I was 13 when it happened. Impressionable age. I think you had to have been at high school for it to have had such an impact. It's a generational thing.

Honestly For our generation it’s called a changing incident much like 9/11.I think I felt more after Columbine than I did 911.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 7:46 pm

I was a senior in high school and I remember when I heard this on the radio on the way home from school, I thought the DJ was playing a joke.  I can remember thinking to myself that sure is a sick joke to be playing.  It wasn’t until I got home to turn on CNN that I realized the scope of what was actually happening.  And then I can remember kids in our school being wary of other kids who were wearing trench coats because the media was all like “watch out for the copy cats”.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeWed Mar 07, 2018 8:25 pm

Ainjel wrote:
I was a senior in high school and I remember when I heard this on the radio on the way home from school, I thought the DJ was playing a joke.  I can remember thinking to myself that sure is a sick joke to be playing.  It wasn’t until I got home to turn on CNN that I realized the scope of what was actually happening.  And then I can remember kids in our school being wary of other kids who were wearing trench coats because the media was all like “watch out for the copy cats”.

My parents had the news on and I got home in to see Patrick falling out of the window. My local news said that they were graduates who were running around with swastikas on their arms and black masks. Then they showed the pictures of Eric and Dylan and you may guess what my first thought was about them...

My mother was terrified of the trenchcoat Mafia for a long time. I on the other hand hoped that we would all be nicer to each other at school and I wouldn’t be bullied anymore. I was wrong.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeThu Mar 08, 2018 12:03 am

I kind of remember it being a downcast day in Kansas, one state over from Colorado, when it happened. My thoughts? "ANOTHER one?" Most of the shootings prior to Columbine had made national news when they happened, you may remember--if you were there. If you don't, you probably don't know a damn thing about Kip Kinkel, Michael Carneal, or the two little redneck kids who rang the fire alarm in Jonesboro, Arkansas. Those raised concern amongst teachers at our school but this one REALLY got to people and I had to listen to gym teachers and such snarling and acting like they'd punch the bullets out of the air "if that happened here." Later that year, there was a very, VERY lame, VERY desperate "clique busting" event in the school gym here--kids were sort of forced to make friends with people outside their social circle, a sign that people here probably still thought the TCM was the main force behind the Columbine shooting. And lots of "if we even HEAR you mutter any threats, you're gone!!" Michael Moore was right--it pretty much sucked to be a kid right after Columbine happened.

My first thought upon seeing them was that Eric looked like a redneck kid and Dylan's jaw made him look like a troglodyte. The big boogeymen immediately after it happened were the TCM and video games--oh man, DOOM finally really caused someone to kill somebody!! The already-simmering video game violence debate had people even more frantically and pathetically trying to defend video games. It was just like when that kid set his brother on fire after watching Beavis & Butthead! Then it came out that they HADN'T been abused as kids, which in the 90s was like something you could hardly believe. In the 90s, when kids did something bad, the boogaboo was ALWAYS child abuse, ALWAYS ALWAYS. But not Eric & Dyl-dyl.

The influence on school culture, cultural references, anti-bullying movements, and other shooters, has been pretty seismic. I wonder if it hasn't been *more* influential than 9/11, but that's probably stupid. It is EASILY the most influential of all major 1990s scandals--Ruby Ridge, Waco, Oklahoma City, OJ Simpson, Tonya Harding, Unabomber, TWA Flight 800? Plenty of kids don't even know what that stuff even is--I ask them all the time!
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeThu Mar 08, 2018 4:30 pm

Lunkhead McGrath wrote:
I kind of remember it being a downcast day in Kansas, one state over from Colorado, when it happened.  My thoughts?  "ANOTHER one?"  Most of the shootings prior to Columbine had made national news when they happened, you may remember--if you were there.  If you don't, you probably don't know a damn thing about Kip Kinkel, Michael Carneal, or the two little redneck kids who rang the fire alarm in Jonesboro, Arkansas.  Those raised concern amongst teachers at our school but this one REALLY got to people and I had to listen to gym teachers and such snarling and acting like they'd punch the bullets out of the air "if that happened here."  Later that year, there was a very, VERY lame, VERY desperate "clique busting" event in the school gym here--kids were sort of forced to make friends with people outside their social circle, a sign that people here probably still thought the TCM was the main force behind the Columbine shooting.  And lots of "if we even HEAR you mutter any threats, you're gone!!" Michael Moore was right--it pretty much sucked to be a kid right after Columbine happened.

My first thought upon seeing them was that Eric looked like a redneck kid and Dylan's jaw made him look like a troglodyte.  The big boogeymen immediately after it happened were the TCM and video games--oh man, DOOM finally really caused someone to kill somebody!!  The already-simmering video game violence debate had people even more frantically and pathetically trying to defend video games.  It was just like when that kid set his brother on fire after watching Beavis & Butthead!  Then it came out that they HADN'T been abused as kids, which in the 90s was like something you could hardly believe.  In the 90s, when kids did something bad, the boogaboo was ALWAYS child abuse, ALWAYS ALWAYS.  But not Eric & Dyl-dyl.  

The influence on school culture, cultural references, anti-bullying movements, and other shooters, has been pretty seismic.  I wonder if it hasn't been *more* influential than 9/11, but that's probably stupid.  It is EASILY the most influential of all major 1990s scandals--Ruby Ridge, Waco, Oklahoma City, OJ Simpson, Tonya Harding, Unabomber, TWA Flight 800?  Plenty of kids don't even know what that stuff even is--I ask them all the time!

Haha your first reaction was also my first reaction upon seeing the media coverage. I literally said "ANOTHER ONE??" out loud. I was a sophomore at the time, and the school I went to already had multiple shooting threats and bomb threats even before columbine happened. We had a weak "lockdown" drill already in place that I remember practicing maybe once before 1999. But after the shooting, our school treated it like it had happened there and went overboard with the repercussions. The outcast kids had a hard time for the rest of the school year and became targeted by Both students and the administrators. I remember our lunch table had a teacher or administrator standing at every corner to "watch" us after the first month or so. Kids who made threats actually got expelled, students would go overboard harassing the outcast kids and if the outcasts defended themselves they were the ones who got in trouble and interrogated in the office, and then their friends would all be pulled in and interrogated. It was kinda outta control there for a while haha. Did anyone else's school react like this afterwards?

Most of this stuff I had forgotten about until I started reading up on this subject again a couple years ago.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeThu Mar 08, 2018 5:51 pm

Lunkhead McGrath wrote:
I kind of remember it being a downcast day in Kansas, one state over from Colorado, when it happened.  My thoughts?  "ANOTHER one?"  Most of the shootings prior to Columbine had made national news when they happened, you may remember--if you were there.  If you don't, you probably don't know a damn thing about Kip Kinkel, Michael Carneal, or the two little redneck kids who rang the fire alarm in Jonesboro, Arkansas.  Those raised concern amongst teachers at our school but this one REALLY got to people and I had to listen to gym teachers and such snarling and acting like they'd punch the bullets out of the air "if that happened here."  Later that year, there was a very, VERY lame, VERY desperate "clique busting" event in the school gym here--kids were sort of forced to make friends with people outside their social circle, a sign that people here probably still thought the TCM was the main force behind the Columbine shooting.  And lots of "if we even HEAR you mutter any threats, you're gone!!" Michael Moore was right--it pretty much sucked to be a kid right after Columbine happened.

My first thought upon seeing them was that Eric looked like a redneck kid and Dylan's jaw made him look like a troglodyte.  The big boogeymen immediately after it happened were the TCM and video games--oh man, DOOM finally really caused someone to kill somebody!!  The already-simmering video game violence debate had people even more frantically and pathetically trying to defend video games.  It was just like when that kid set his brother on fire after watching Beavis & Butthead!  Then it came out that they HADN'T been abused as kids, which in the 90s was like something you could hardly believe.  In the 90s, when kids did something bad, the boogaboo was ALWAYS child abuse, ALWAYS ALWAYS.  But not Eric & Dyl-dyl.  

The influence on school culture, cultural references, anti-bullying movements, and other shooters, has been pretty seismic.  I wonder if it hasn't been *more* influential than 9/11, but that's probably stupid.  It is EASILY the most influential of all major 1990s scandals--Ruby Ridge, Waco, Oklahoma City, OJ Simpson, Tonya Harding, Unabomber, TWA Flight 800?  Plenty of kids don't even know what that stuff even is--I ask them all the time!

i know about those incidents, but the only ones i've really researched are the 4/19 OKC bombing, Kip Kinkel, Ted Kazynski(forget how to spell it) and Michael Carneal

edit: i know a bit about ruby ridge but just looked it up and it's kinda wierd and funny that there was a Kevin Harris at RR and Eric's brother was named kevin
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeSat Mar 10, 2018 5:23 am

eldigato wrote:
Lunkhead McGrath wrote:
I kind of remember it being a downcast day in Kansas, one state over from Colorado, when it happened.  My thoughts?  "ANOTHER one?"  Most of the shootings prior to Columbine had made national news when they happened, you may remember--if you were there.  If you don't, you probably don't know a damn thing about Kip Kinkel, Michael Carneal, or the two little redneck kids who rang the fire alarm in Jonesboro, Arkansas.  Those raised concern amongst teachers at our school but this one REALLY got to people and I had to listen to gym teachers and such snarling and acting like they'd punch the bullets out of the air "if that happened here."  Later that year, there was a very, VERY lame, VERY desperate "clique busting" event in the school gym here--kids were sort of forced to make friends with people outside their social circle, a sign that people here probably still thought the TCM was the main force behind the Columbine shooting.  And lots of "if we even HEAR you mutter any threats, you're gone!!" Michael Moore was right--it pretty much sucked to be a kid right after Columbine happened.

My first thought upon seeing them was that Eric looked like a redneck kid and Dylan's jaw made him look like a troglodyte.  The big boogeymen immediately after it happened were the TCM and video games--oh man, DOOM finally really caused someone to kill somebody!!  The already-simmering video game violence debate had people even more frantically and pathetically trying to defend video games.  It was just like when that kid set his brother on fire after watching Beavis & Butthead!  Then it came out that they HADN'T been abused as kids, which in the 90s was like something you could hardly believe.  In the 90s, when kids did something bad, the boogaboo was ALWAYS child abuse, ALWAYS ALWAYS.  But not Eric & Dyl-dyl.  

The influence on school culture, cultural references, anti-bullying movements, and other shooters, has been pretty seismic.  I wonder if it hasn't been *more* influential than 9/11, but that's probably stupid.  It is EASILY the most influential of all major 1990s scandals--Ruby Ridge, Waco, Oklahoma City, OJ Simpson, Tonya Harding, Unabomber, TWA Flight 800?  Plenty of kids don't even know what that stuff even is--I ask them all the time!

i know about those incidents, but the only ones i've really researched are the 4/19 OKC bombing, Kip Kinkel, Ted Kazynski(forget how to spell it) and Michael Carneal

edit: i know a bit about ruby ridge but just looked it up and it's kinda wierd and funny that there was a Kevin Harris at RR and Eric's brother was named kevin

Kevin Harris is probably a pretty common name.

Ruby Ridge has been called the redneck Wounded Knee. It was the "government coming to get me" fantasy come true. It put much of the country in the strange (although understandable) position of having to sympathize with a white separatist. Granted while I do not care for Randy Weaver's beliefs on race, or probably much else, it is hard to defend the sniper blowing his wife's freakin' head off while she was holding their baby.

Kip Kinkel was a sad little boy. Don't tell Dave Cullen, assuming he doesn't already know! He'll sympathize too much! (he probably does already know)

Michael Carneal I know little about. Not that his case didn't get attention at the time. It did.

The two little rednecks who shot people in Jonesboro are out of jail now. That's probably the only case I can think of where a shooting didn't involve suicide at the end, or being locked up for life, but I don't know all of them as well as you guys do.

Ted Kaczynski, the first two things I think of when I think of him are 1)the hilarious opening to his Rotten Library entry ("He was no poseur. He practiced what he preached. You have to give him that.") and 2)He has been bandied about, rather pathetically, as a Zodiac suspect. Oh, and look up the pics of him when he was a professor in the 60s, he looks so young and smart, later on he was bearded and gross and in the crappy TV movie they made in the 90s he got played by the guy from the Saw movies.

OKC bombing - This was what actually knocked OJ off the news back in 1995. And unlike today's tragedies the coverage wasn't over with after a week, though President Trump's dumb comments are certainly helping Parkland get some legs (I don't mean to be crass by saying this, but look how quickly the world moved on from Stephen Paddock.)
Details on what Timothy McVeigh was doing up until the bombing are CONSPIRACY THEORY HELL. Tread lightly and at your own risk!!!!
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeSat Mar 10, 2018 12:26 pm

Lunkhead McGrath wrote:
Kip Kinkel was a sad little boy.  Don't tell Dave Cullen, assuming he doesn't already know!  He'll sympathize too much! (he probably does already know)

Hell I sympathize with Kip a great deal.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeSat Mar 10, 2018 3:03 pm

Lunkhead McGrath wrote:
eldigato wrote:
Lunkhead McGrath wrote:
I kind of remember it being a downcast day in Kansas, one state over from Colorado, when it happened.  My thoughts?  "ANOTHER one?"  Most of the shootings prior to Columbine had made national news when they happened, you may remember--if you were there.  If you don't, you probably don't know a damn thing about Kip Kinkel, Michael Carneal, or the two little redneck kids who rang the fire alarm in Jonesboro, Arkansas.  Those raised concern amongst teachers at our school but this one REALLY got to people and I had to listen to gym teachers and such snarling and acting like they'd punch the bullets out of the air "if that happened here."  Later that year, there was a very, VERY lame, VERY desperate "clique busting" event in the school gym here--kids were sort of forced to make friends with people outside their social circle, a sign that people here probably still thought the TCM was the main force behind the Columbine shooting.  And lots of "if we even HEAR you mutter any threats, you're gone!!" Michael Moore was right--it pretty much sucked to be a kid right after Columbine happened.

My first thought upon seeing them was that Eric looked like a redneck kid and Dylan's jaw made him look like a troglodyte.  The big boogeymen immediately after it happened were the TCM and video games--oh man, DOOM finally really caused someone to kill somebody!!  The already-simmering video game violence debate had people even more frantically and pathetically trying to defend video games.  It was just like when that kid set his brother on fire after watching Beavis & Butthead!  Then it came out that they HADN'T been abused as kids, which in the 90s was like something you could hardly believe.  In the 90s, when kids did something bad, the boogaboo was ALWAYS child abuse, ALWAYS ALWAYS.  But not Eric & Dyl-dyl.  

The influence on school culture, cultural references, anti-bullying movements, and other shooters, has been pretty seismic.  I wonder if it hasn't been *more* influential than 9/11, but that's probably stupid.  It is EASILY the most influential of all major 1990s scandals--Ruby Ridge, Waco, Oklahoma City, OJ Simpson, Tonya Harding, Unabomber, TWA Flight 800?  Plenty of kids don't even know what that stuff even is--I ask them all the time!

i know about those incidents, but the only ones i've really researched are the 4/19 OKC bombing, Kip Kinkel, Ted Kazynski(forget how to spell it) and Michael Carneal

edit: i know a bit about ruby ridge but just looked it up and it's kinda wierd and funny that there was a Kevin Harris at RR and Eric's brother was named kevin

Kevin Harris is probably a pretty common name.

Ruby Ridge has been called the redneck Wounded Knee.  It was the "government coming to get me" fantasy come true.  It put much of the country in the strange (although understandable) position of having to sympathize with a white separatist.   Granted while I do not care for Randy Weaver's beliefs on race, or probably much else, it is hard to defend the sniper blowing his wife's freakin' head off while she was holding their baby.  

Kip Kinkel was a sad little boy.  Don't tell Dave Cullen, assuming he doesn't already know!  He'll sympathize too much! (he probably does already know)

Michael Carneal I know little about.  Not that his case didn't get attention at the time.  It did.  

The two little rednecks who shot people in Jonesboro are out of jail now.  That's probably the only case I can think of where a shooting didn't involve suicide at the end, or being locked up for life, but I don't know all of them as well as you guys do.  

Ted Kaczynski, the first two things I think of when I think of him are 1)the hilarious opening to his Rotten Library entry ("He was no poseur.  He practiced what he preached.  You have to give him that.") and 2)He has been bandied about, rather pathetically, as a Zodiac suspect.  Oh, and look up the pics of him when he was a professor in the 60s, he looks so young and smart, later on he was bearded and gross and in the crappy TV movie they made in the 90s he got played by the guy from the Saw movies.

OKC bombing - This was what actually knocked OJ off the news back in 1995.  And unlike today's tragedies the coverage wasn't over with after a week, though President Trump's dumb comments are certainly helping Parkland get some legs (I don't mean to be crass by saying this, but look how quickly the world moved on from Stephen Paddock.)
Details on what Timothy McVeigh was doing up until the bombing are CONSPIRACY THEORY HELL.  Tread lightly and at your own risk!!!!

yeah golden and johnson

i've read some about kip
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeSun Mar 18, 2018 6:40 pm

Thursday, March 18, 1999

The tape starts again and Eric and Dylan are once again in the Harris family living room. They state that it is March 18th, "in the middle of the night". They talk about "Echo and Delta" pipe bombs and whether or not they should put nails on them. They state that "religions are gay" and for "people who are weak and can't deal with life".

They say they need to discuss secondary objectives to place the bombs, places that are "out of the way". Dylan mentions a trail near Wadsworth, "by your old house" (7844 South Teller Court, according to Eric's home computer). They then talk about how they should "rig something up with a trip bomb between two trees, so when someone goes down the path it will go off." The boys then discuss the possibility of "placing time bombs down there". They mention it would be "harder and take more resources". They say, "This will add a few frags to the list" and that the "fucking fire department is going to be busy for a month".

They talk about a couple of people, one of whom Eric says he wants to "shoot in the groin area". They talk about someone named Jesse Gordon and "the Goof Troop". They then go on a racist tirade, talking about how that "nigger stopped us that day" and how black people talk in "Ebonics". They bash on "spics". Then the subject turns to bowling and how each individual in the bowling class has a designated culture group to use as a target on the bowling pins to kill, and that this helps them bowl better.

They talk about how "world peace is an impossible thing" and mention how you can look on the Internet to learn how to make "bombs, poison, napalm, and how to buy guns if you're underage". They also talk about how "Mrs. X-Y-Z bought our guns".

Eric and Dylan say that there are "only two weeks left, and one more weekend" and that "it is coming up fucking quick". They say the "napalm better not freeze at that certain person's house". They talk about "Chris' pizza's house" like they're trying to disguise a name and discuss "Yoshi" in a negative way. They say that they need a "lot more napalm" and may just use "gas and oil". They express concern that it will be tough, and opening the zipper may make it go off. They say they need some "back-ups". They talk about how the sprinkler system may "put out a fire" and Eric says he should possibly keep the battery out of the device, set the bag, put it in and leave so it doesn't "blow up in the commons".

They discuss credit card fraud; Eric raises his hand like he's admitting to having done it. Then they talk about "tests", saying: "We wouldn't be where we are without them." They talk about gas and oil and how it will be "one hell of a mental picture". They wonder about the possibility of people catching fire. The topic then shifts to graduation and how it will be a "graduation memorial service with lots of people crying". They theorize there will probably be a candlelight memorial.

Eric says he's got "100 bullets and 10 loaded clips", and that he needs lasers for his carbine.

Eric: (looking directly into the camera) "You're lucky it doesn't hold more ammo."

Dylan says he has a "50 round clip, two 36's, and a 24."

"There's a lot of shit to do." they say. They need to set up more propane bombs and get more containers. Dylan says he still needs to get his pants, fill his clips, and get his pouches to load shells in. They say they need "devices" for the propane tanks and they need more "bomb holders". Eric says they need to go to Radio Shack because he heard they had a "thing to increase the voltage" through a clock and speaker, igniting a solar igniter. Eric says that he'd tell people that he was doing special effects for a movie; "that will be a good excuse".

Insist the boys, "We are but we aren't psycho."

Dylan asks Eric if he thinks the cops will listen to the whole video. They then theorize that the video will be cut up into little pieces, and the police would only show the world what they wanted it to look like. Eric and Dylan said then that they wanted to distribute the videos to four news stations. Eric says he's going to his journal and send copies via email to distribute blueprints and maps. He then talks about "Tier" and calls it "My life's work", saying he wants to get it published. (Investigating officer Zimmerman recognized the term as "some of the direction type booklets for the video game Doom" which the officer took from Eric Harris's bedroom during the search warrant following the shootings.)

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeSun Mar 18, 2018 6:42 pm

From earlier in the week:

Monday, March 15, 1999

Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold are sitting in the Harris home basement-level family room. Eric is sitting on the couch and Dylan's sitting in a chair nearby. They're drinking from a Jack Daniels bottle, which Eric points out. The boys begin to discuss a number of topics; they speak of their hope that the videos they're making will one day be shown all over the world, when their "masterpiece" is done and everyone wants to know why they did it.

Dylan: "I'd like to make a thank you to Mark John Doe and Phil John Doe. I hope you don't get fucked." (Eric laughs. Dylan continues.) "We used them. They had no clue... Don't blame them. And don't fucking arrest them. Don't arrest any of our friends, or family members or our co-workers. They had no fucking clue. Don't arrest anyone, because they didn't have a fucking clue. If it hadn't been them, it would've been someone else over 21."

They mention the time a clerk from Green Mountain Guns called Eric's home. Eric's dad, Wayne Harris, answered the phone.

When the clerk told him "Hey, your clips are in." Wayne - who owned guns himself - told the clerk he hadn't ordered any clips. Eric said his father never asked whether the caller even had the right phone number. Eric says if etiher the clerk or his father had asked just one question, "we would have been fucked.".

Dylan: "We wouldn't be able to do what we're going to do."

They then talk about Brandon Larson and how "you will find his body". The boys talk about the large propane bombs they plan to use on the unsuspecting students in the school cafeteria. They discuss bombs and two bags of "propane and napalm", and mention Mr. Stevens and the shotgun.

"We're proving ourselves," they tell the camera and go on to discuss their philosphies. Eric says he isn't spending much time with his family, so that there won't be any "bonding" and "this won't be harder to do".

Eric: "I'm sorry I have so much rage, but you put it on me."

Eric then complains about his father and how his family had to move five times. He says he always had to be the new kid in school, and was always at the bottom of the "food chain", and had no chance to earn any respect from his peers as he always had to "start out at the bottom of the ladder". He hated the way people made fun of him: "my face, my hair, my shirts." He's wearing a t-shirt that has the words "Wilder Wein" printed on it -- he references the shirt several times during the video but never explains what it means. [Wilder Wein is a song written by Rammstein.]

Eric: "More rage. More rage." (motions with his hands for emphasis) "Keep building it on."

Dylan: "If you could see all the anger I've stored over the past four fucking years..."

Dylan then recalls how popular and athletic his older brother Byron was and how he constantly "ripped" on him, as did his brother's friends. According to Dylan, with the exception of his parents, his extended family treated him like the runt of the litter.

Dylan: "You made me what I am. You added to the rage."

Dylan says that as far back as the Foothills Day Care center he hated the "stuck-up" kids who he felt hated him. "Being shy didn't help. I'm going to kill you all. You've been giving us shit for years."

Dylan: "Fuck you Walsh."

The boys go on to discuss Walsh patrolling Deer Creek (Deputy Tim Walsh primarly works the south end of Jefferson County). The teens then talk about how there's "a month and a half left". They mention Green Mountain Guns again and how they phoned the house, leaving a message on the answering machine: "Your clips are in".

Dylan and Eric brag about hiding their tools of death -- and about the close calls along the way. Eric shows the camera a black tackle box with his bomb-making equipment stowed inside. They boast about concocting their plan under the noses of unsuspecting parents and friends.

Dylan recalls a time when his parents walked into his bedroom while he was trying on his trenchcoat to see if it would hide his sawed-off shotgun. "They didn't even know it was there."

Eric tells about a day he was going to go shooting in the mountains. He had his shotgun in a gym bag: it was in his "terrorist bag, sticking out". When he walked by his mother, she saw the butt of the gun but she assumed it was nothing more sinister than his BB gun. Fooling people was a point of pride for both boys, one they gloat about during the video-taping.

Eric: "I could convince them that I'm going to climb Mount Everest, or I have a twin brother growing out of my back. I can make you believe anything."

The subject shifts and they begin talking about several people they know. They make a comment about Dustin Harris (or Harrison), and how "everything you say is pointless."

Eric: "Shut the fuck up, Nick, you laugh too much! And those two girls sitting next to you, they probably want you to shut the fuck up, too! Jesus! Rachel and Jen.. and.. whatever."

Dylan: "I don't like you, Rachel and Jen, you're stuck up little bitches, you're fucking little.. Christian, Godly little whores!"
[Hear this and the line above]

Eric: "Yeah.. 'I love Jesus! I love Jesus!' -- shut the fuck up!"

Dylan: "What would Jesus do? What the fuck would I do..?" (he acts like he's shooting the camera with his hand, with sound to accompany it)

Eric: "I would shoot you in the motherfucking head! Go Romans! Thank God they crucified that asshole."
[Hear the above 3 lines]

Eric and Dylan: "Go Romans!" "Go Romans!!" "Yeah!!" "Wooo!"

Eric discusses "Arlene", his 12-gauge Savage shotgun. "Thanks to the gun show, and to Robyn. Robyn is very cool."

The boys then decide to take a video tour of "Reb's room" and "all the illegal shit" in it. Dylan backs out of the room with the camera and pretends to be Eric's mother.

Eric: (waves at the camera) "Hi, mom."

Taping Eric Harris's bedroom, they record a desk with a hutch, where Eric points out a pair of gloves which he says he took from a doctor's office and uses for making bombs. He points out several packages of fireworks on top of a speaker, which is also on top of the hutch. He also calls attention to a soda can with several shots through it, along with quite a few shotgun shells sitting atop the hutch. He then points out a small "black treasure chest" that he calls a "good hiding place".

Eric then points out a small bullet that he says is his "first bullet", then in a drawer he shows off a stash of solar igniters, batteries, pipes, clocks, and engines. He pulls out a black two-bell alarm clock that he discusses using to build a bomb with and then takes out what he describes as "completed pipe bombs" from a Home Base bag taken from one of the desk drawers. He pulls out another Home Base bag filled with more pipe bombs he calls the "Beta batch", at which point Dylan mentions the "bunker". Dylan tries to film out the west window but it's too dark outside; all that records is the glare on the window.

Dylan: "You can't see it, it's buried there. That's why it's called a bunker."

Eric says there are "four mortar grenades, ten crickets, and three Alfa's." He then points out a blue spiral notebook that he calls his "journal".

Eric points out a blue spiral notebook that he calls his "journal". Eric opens another drawer, revealing a piece of the handle of one of their sawed-off shotguns. Also filmed in one of the drawers are two clocks which the boys describe as "future bombs". They show off a box of "crickets" -- small CO2 cartridges, duct taped with fuses.

Dylan turns the video camera toward the dresser that's against the west wall. Eric opens up a door and points out a "Hell dog drawing" taped to the inside of the door. He says it was given to him years ago. Next to it is a piece of paper on which is written an "Anarchist substitute ingredient list".

Eric goes on to describe a "25 pound bag of [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] buckshot" which is inside the dresser, but isn't shown on the tape. Eric then pulls out a BB rifle from what he describes as the hall closet (though it appears, on the tape, to be a closet in his room). He says this is where he keeps his shotgun. He also takes a box out of the closet and tells the camera that this is is his knife. From the box he pulls out a black-handled combat knife in a black sheath. He says that he paid $15 for it. Eric says there's a Swastika on the side and the camera zooms in to show the Swastika etched into the sheath.

On the east wall, adjacent to the bedroom door, the teens point out a coil of green wire that they call a "50 foot cannon fuse". They move to the bookcase on the east wall, talking about a "Demon Knight" CD case, which Eric opens to reveal a receipt from Green Mountain Guns for "nine magazines" of 9mm carbine rifle bullets that they purchased for $15 each. Eric then removes a CD rack to expose three large pipe bombs hidden behind it, which he calls the "biggest".

Eric then pulls out a black card box filled with "29 crickets" (more CO2 cartridge bombs). Eric then points to an area of the room (though the camera doesn't follow where he points) and describes a "coffee can in the corner which is full of gunpowder". The camera then focuses in on a black plastic box with the word "explosives" scratched into the side, sitting near the north wall of Eric's bedroom on the floor. Dylan mentions how Eric's parents took it away from him. Eric adds that they only took the pipe bomb out of it, and gave the box back. Inside the box the camera shows clock parts, fuses, tools, and CO2 cartridges.

They also tape a white plastic file case that holds "nails for pipe bombs, caps to be filled with gunpowder", two boxes of 9mm rounds (50 bullets in each), 12 shotgun shells in a box, another box of shotgun shells, clips for a gun, and webbing. "What you will find on my body in April," Eric tells the camera.

Later footage:

Dylan Klebold sits in a tan La-Z-Boy recliner in Eric's basement bedroom, chewing on a toothpick while Eric Harris messes around with the now-stationary video recorder. When he's done Eric moves to sit in another recliner with the bottle of Jack Daniels whiskey, and his sawed-off shotgun named "Arlene" on his lap. He takes a small drink and tries not to wince at the taste.

Eric: (in reference to the Oregon and Kentucky shootings) "Do not think we're trying to copy anyone. We had the idea before the first one ever happened. Our plan is better, not like those fucks in Kentucky with camouflage and .22s. Those kids were only trying to be accepted by others."

They go on to talk about how they hate all races: "niggers, spics, Jews*, fucking whites". They also mention enemies that abused them and friends who didn't do enough to defend them.
* [Dylan's family was Jewish.]

In one segment, Eric and Dylan spend more than an hour discussing their hatred for humanity and their fellow students, whom they vowed to kill. They name some of the classmates they hope to murder [It's unknown whether any of those students were killed or wounded during the assault].

A couple times during the rants Dylan has to warn Eric to talk more quietly so as not to wake Eric's parents who're sleeping upstairs.

Eric: "We need a fucking kick start. If we have a fucking religious war - or oil - or anything. We need to get a chain reaction going here. It's gonna be like fucking Doom man - after the bombs explode. Tick, tick, tick, tick... Haa! That fucking shotgun (he kisses his gun) straight out of Doom. Go ahead and change gun laws - how do you think we got ours?"

The boys talk about starting a revolution of the dispossessed.

Eric: "We're going to kick-start a revolution."

The teens discuss coming back as ghosts to haunt the survivors, to "create flashbacks from what we do and drive them insane," Eric tells the camera.

Eric: "You guys will all die, and it will be fucking soon! I hope you get an idea of what we're implying here. You all need to die! We need to die, too! We need to fucking kick-start the revolution here!"

Dylan: "The most deaths in U.S. history."

Eric: (kisses his shotgun) "Hopefully."

Dylan: "We're hoping. We're hoping. I hope we kill 250 of you. It will be the most nerve-racking 15 minutes of my life, after the bombs are set and we're waiting to charge through the school. Seconds will be like hours. I can't wait. I'll be shaking like a leaf."

Eric: "I hope people have flashbacks."

Eric: (making shooting noises while aiming his shotgun) "Isn't it fun to get the respect we're going to deserve? We don't give a shit because we're going to die doing it."

It's getting late; Eric looks at his watch and says it's 1:28 AM on March 15. Dylan says people will note the date and time when watching it.

Dylan: (predicting his parents' feelings of regret) "If only we could have reached them sooner, or found this tape."

Eric "If only we would have searched their room. If only we would have asked the right questions." (talks about his mother being thoughtful, bringing him candy and Slim Jims) "I really am sorry about all this."

Dylan: "They gave me my fucking life. It's up to me what I do with it."

Eric: (shrugs) "My parents might have made some mistakes that they weren't really aware of."

Dylan: (talks about how his parents taught him to be independent and self-reliant) "I appreciate that."

They talk about how they want movies to be made about their story. Eric says he wants the film to have "a lot of foreshadowing and dramatic irony". He mentions a poem he wrote where he imagined himself as a bullet.

Dylan: "Directors will be fighting over this story. I know we're gonna have followers because we're so fucking God-like. We're not exactly human -- we have human bodies but we've evolved into one step above you, fucking human shit. We actually have fucking self-awareness."

The boys speculate whether Steven Spielberg or Quentin Tarantino should direct the film.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeSun Mar 18, 2018 6:48 pm

I really wanna see the tapes now,im not good at visualizing stuff
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 6:31 am

eldigato wrote:
I really wanna see the tapes now,im not good at visualizing stuff


Said you and every single Columbine researcher EVER! Haha I'm good at visualizing, BUT I still wanna see those damn tapes! Very Happy
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 9:15 am

I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 9:23 am

W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I agree. I think it causes a lot of people to think more of them than they do. Allows the imagination to run wild. When in reality these were two boys whose voices squeaked when they spilled coke on the carpet

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 9:29 am

Lizpuff wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I agree.  I think it causes a lot of people to think more of them than they do.  Allows the imagination to run wild.  When in reality these were two boys whose voices squeaked when they spilled coke on the carpet

LOL, I forgot about that part of the transcript.

If the real leak is any indication it's pretty much them acting like dorks, complaining and mocking their classmates and Dylan pointing a gun at Eric's head on accident showing his remarkable gun safety skills.

Honestly as much as I hate to admit it, the scene in I'm Not Ashamed with the boys pretending to shoot their guns in Eric's basement going "bang, bang" is probably not that far off....
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 9:52 am

W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.


Totally agree. Yet I STILL want to see them in all their cringy glory. Haha
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 9:56 am

Screamingophelia wrote:
LOL, I forgot about that part of the transcript.

If the real leak is any indication it's pretty much them acting like dorks, complaining and mocking their classmates and Dylan pointing a gun at Eric's head on accident showing his remarkable gun safety skills.

Honestly as much as I hate to admit it, the scene in I'm Not Ashamed with the boys pretending to shoot their guns in Eric's basement going "bang, bang" is probably not that far off....



Eric smooching on Arlene, and that damn candy house bit! LOL
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 10:02 am

ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Screamingophelia wrote:
LOL, I forgot about that part of the transcript.

If the real leak is any indication it's pretty much them acting like dorks, complaining and mocking their classmates and Dylan pointing a gun at Eric's head on accident showing his remarkable gun safety skills.

Honestly as much as I hate to admit it, the scene in I'm Not Ashamed with the boys pretending to shoot their guns in Eric's basement going "bang, bang" is probably not that far off....



Eric smooching on Arlene, and that damn candy house bit! LOL


I want to see it ALL!

lol!

Compromise, just release a BT sizzle reel, only highlights from the tapes.

I doubt now it will be shocking. I think Sue not wanting them released just has to do with loving Dylan and wanting to protect him and also probably the whole family too, she wanted a different image of Dylan out there. . It was years later before they released his autopsy because she was fighting that too.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 1:44 pm

W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 7:52 pm

QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"... "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeMon Mar 19, 2018 8:58 pm

Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 8:44 am

QuestionMark wrote:
Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

IDK if this is what FO2 meant but it is thought that the BT were also botched by Jeffco in some way. That perhaps Eric and Dylan mentioned something that didn't look good on Jeffco or that maybe they said something else that was trying to be hidden. So they used the copycat reasoning to try to get out of showing the tapes when really there was something underlying that they didn't want to mention

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 8:48 am

Lizpuff wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

IDK if this is what FO2 meant but it is thought that the BT were also botched by Jeffco in some way.  That perhaps Eric and Dylan mentioned something that didn't look good on Jeffco or that maybe they said something else that was trying to be hidden.   So they used the copycat reasoning to try to get out of showing the tapes when really there was something underlying that they didn't want to mention

This is why I am skeptical of the released BT transcripts. Jeffco proved they weren't above lying their asses off to save face, so anything they said/say is always shaded in doubt.

Whether they lied about anything else or not, they did bring the public's mistrust on themselves.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 8:53 am

ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Lizpuff wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

IDK if this is what FO2 meant but it is thought that the BT were also botched by Jeffco in some way.  That perhaps Eric and Dylan mentioned something that didn't look good on Jeffco or that maybe they said something else that was trying to be hidden.   So they used the copycat reasoning to try to get out of showing the tapes when really there was something underlying that they didn't want to mention

This is why I am skeptical of the released BT transcripts. Jeffco proved they weren't above lying their asses off to save face, so anything they said/say is always shaded in doubt.

Whether they lied about anything else or not, they did bring the public's mistrust on themselves.

And the stigma has lasted to today and beyond. I don't know of any other force quite so famous as them

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 8:54 am

Lizpuff wrote:
ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Lizpuff wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

IDK if this is what FO2 meant but it is thought that the BT were also botched by Jeffco in some way.  That perhaps Eric and Dylan mentioned something that didn't look good on Jeffco or that maybe they said something else that was trying to be hidden.   So they used the copycat reasoning to try to get out of showing the tapes when really there was something underlying that they didn't want to mention

This is why I am skeptical of the released BT transcripts. Jeffco proved they weren't above lying their asses off to save face, so anything they said/say is always shaded in doubt.

Whether they lied about anything else or not, they did bring the public's mistrust on themselves.

And the stigma has lasted to today and beyond.  I don't know of any other force quite so famous as them


Agreed!
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 9:05 am

ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Lizpuff wrote:
ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Lizpuff wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

IDK if this is what FO2 meant but it is thought that the BT were also botched by Jeffco in some way.  That perhaps Eric and Dylan mentioned something that didn't look good on Jeffco or that maybe they said something else that was trying to be hidden.   So they used the copycat reasoning to try to get out of showing the tapes when really there was something underlying that they didn't want to mention

This is why I am skeptical of the released BT transcripts. Jeffco proved they weren't above lying their asses off to save face, so anything they said/say is always shaded in doubt.

Whether they lied about anything else or not, they did bring the public's mistrust on themselves.

And the stigma has lasted to today and beyond.  I don't know of any other force quite so famous as them


Agreed!


Also the videos that were released and the things that were released just add to both the mystique and also the relatability in someways. Makes them look like less of these criminal masterminds (snort) and more like regular kids.

I don’t believe this but I’m just Going to  throw it out there for conspiracy theory sake, what if something did happen to the boys that night of the van incident and they mentioned it and that’s a reason they were not released. I’m not talking about rape or assault of course, but something else Jeffco wants to cover up.

I feel like there would be more evidence to that though. So I’m at a  bit of a loss

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 9:14 am

Screamingophelia wrote:
ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Lizpuff wrote:
ShadowedGoddess wrote:
Lizpuff wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
Fatheroftwo wrote:
QuestionMark wrote:
W.A.R. wrote:
I really think them holding back the tapes actually did more damage. It allowed mystique around them when its probably a cringefest.

I really don't think it mattered that much. Release TBT or not there was always gonna be a mystique around Eric and Dylan. It's due to the high profile nature of the crime.

totally agree, enough circumstances already secured E/D's "fame"...  "Copycat" concerns were just smoke screens for other agendas.  

What other agendas?

IDK if this is what FO2 meant but it is thought that the BT were also botched by Jeffco in some way.  That perhaps Eric and Dylan mentioned something that didn't look good on Jeffco or that maybe they said something else that was trying to be hidden.   So they used the copycat reasoning to try to get out of showing the tapes when really there was something underlying that they didn't want to mention

This is why I am skeptical of the released BT transcripts. Jeffco proved they weren't above lying their asses off to save face, so anything they said/say is always shaded in doubt.

Whether they lied about anything else or not, they did bring the public's mistrust on themselves.

And the stigma has lasted to today and beyond.  I don't know of any other force quite so famous as them


Agreed!


Also the videos that were released and the things that were released just add to both the mystique and also the relatability in someways. Makes them look like less of these criminal masterminds (snort) and more like regular kids.

I don’t believe this but I’m just Going to  throw it out there for conspiracy theory sake, what if something did happen to the boys that night of the van incident and they mentioned it and that’s a reason they were not released. I’m not talking about full-blown rape  but maybe there was brutality or something like that?

I feel like there would be more evidence to that though. So I’m at a  bit of a loss

Yea I dont believe rape but maybe? The what ifs on what they hid is endless so pretty much anything is possible.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 5:36 pm

ShadowedGoddess wrote:
This is why I am skeptical of the released BT transcripts.

I thought the victim's families said they were accurate? IDK.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 6:02 pm

On this day in 1999 - a Saturday - Eric, Dylan, and 13 others had only one month to live.

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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 20, 2018 9:06 pm

LPorter101 wrote:
On this day in 1999 - a Saturday - Eric, Dylan, and 13 others had only one month to live.

eric and 14 others according to cullen
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeThu Mar 22, 2018 7:45 pm

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Quote :
Eric Harris thought about war, fantasized about war and wrote about war. He was thrilled when he heard, one morning in philosophy class, that the United States was on the verge of bombing Yugoslavia. Rebecca Heins, who sat next to him, remembers Harris saying, "I hope we do go to war, I'll be the first one there." He wanted to be in the front lines, he said. He wanted, as he put it, to "shoot everyone," Heins recalls.

Harris said that morning that he hoped he would get drafted. But then he took direct action to improve his chances of becoming a real warrior: He tried to enlist in the Marines. He seemed a good candidate, physically trim and extremely smart. But he was not destined to storm a beach or parachute behind enemy lines in the uniform of his nation.

NATO forces began bombing Yugoslavia on Wednesday, March 24, 1999. So that would have been nineteen years ago this Saturday.

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PostSubject: yugo   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 23, 2018 6:52 pm

LPorter101 wrote:
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]

Quote :
Eric Harris thought about war, fantasized about war and wrote about war. He was thrilled when he heard, one morning in philosophy class, that the United States was on the verge of bombing Yugoslavia. Rebecca Heins, who sat next to him, remembers Harris saying, "I hope we do go to war, I'll be the first one there." He wanted to be in the front lines, he said. He wanted, as he put it, to "shoot everyone," Heins recalls.

Harris said that morning that he hoped he would get drafted. But then he took direct action to improve his chances of becoming a real warrior: He tried to enlist in the Marines. He seemed a good candidate, physically trim and extremely smart. But he was not destined to storm a beach or parachute behind enemy lines in the uniform of his nation.

NATO forces began bombing Yugoslavia on Wednesday, March 24, 1999. So that would have been nineteen years ago this Saturday.

What, Eric's chest cavity wouldn't have stopped him from getting into the Marines?

Ahhh, the Serbs. The world's Big Hated Guys before Osama bin Laden showed up. Ask any kid E&D's age nowadays if they even know what that was all about, you'd be less likely to get a "yes" than if you asked E&D themselves what the Falklands War was.
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 23, 2018 7:57 pm

Quote :
What, Eric's chest cavity wouldn't have stopped him from getting into the Marines?

Ahhh, the Serbs.  The world's Big Hated Guys before Osama bin Laden showed up.  Ask any kid E&D's age nowadays if they even know what that was all about, you'd be less likely to get a "yes" than if you asked E&D themselves what the Falklands War was.  

Ironically, many members of the Kosovo Liberation Army - the group the Serbs were fighting, the group whose asses *we* saved - went on to fight for al-Qaeda and ISIS. (The same thing happened in Afghanistan - in the '80s, we gave money and arms to Muslim fighters so they could fight the Soviets. Years later, those same fighters ended up killing our troops.)

Ironic that the same news networks that covered NATO's war against the Serbs:


...would soon be covering Eric and Dylan's revolution of the dispossessed:



In the '90s, there were three big (and bad) events that happened on April 19 or 20: Waco in '93, Oklahoma City in '95, and Columbine in '99.

This guy ended up narrating all three of them:






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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeFri Mar 23, 2018 8:52 pm

LPorter101 wrote:
Quote :
What, Eric's chest cavity wouldn't have stopped him from getting into the Marines?

Ahhh, the Serbs.  The world's Big Hated Guys before Osama bin Laden showed up.  Ask any kid E&D's age nowadays if they even know what that was all about, you'd be less likely to get a "yes" than if you asked E&D themselves what the Falklands War was.  

Ironically, many members of the Kosovo Liberation Army - the group the Serbs were fighting, the group whose asses *we* saved - went on to fight for al-Qaeda and ISIS. (The same thing happened in Afghanistan - in the '80s, we gave money and arms to Muslim fighters so they could fight the Soviets. Years later, those same fighters ended up killing our troops.)

Ironic that the same news networks that covered NATO's war against the Serbs:


...would soon be covering Eric and Dylan's revolution of the dispossessed:



In the '90s, there were three big (and bad) events that happened on April 19 or 20: Waco in '93, Oklahoma City in '95, and Columbine in '99.

This guy ended up narrating all three of them:






the atf is a joke. GAIZ LETS BURN ALL DA CHILDRUNZ
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PostSubject: Re: Nineteen years of Columbine   8 - Nineteen years of Columbine Icon_minitimeTue Mar 27, 2018 4:09 pm

Nineteen years ago today, Dylan and his folks were at the University of Arizona. The Klebolds drove down on March 25 and spent four days there.

In 1999, March 25 was a Thursday, so it looks like they spent the whole weekend there.

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