- Joined
- Dec 12, 2018
You don’t seem to understand statistics. Only 16% of single parents are single fathers. Therefore any child from a single parent household is about 4/5 more likely to have a single mom than dad. So any school shooter (using your example) from a single parent household is 4/5 times more likely to have a single mom than dad. That’s a huge difference.So where is the huge list of school shooter retards and morons raised by single fathers? Having a good male authority figure in your life is almost always better than having a good female one.
but using your example of school shooters:
Adam Lanza (Sandy Hook) - parents had shared custody , was currently with Mom at time of shooting (age 20)
Dylan Klebold (Columbine) - both parents lived in home (age 17)
Eric Harris (Columbine) - both parents lived in home (age 18 )
Seung-Hui Cho (Virginia Tech) - both parents lived at home while Cho was at uni (age 23)
Nikolas Cruz (Parkland) - adopted at birth, both adoptive parents died months before shooting but were together until death, bio mom had drug and violence issues but Nikolas never met her, bio dad unkown (age 19)
Dimitrios Pagourtzis (Santa Fe) - both parents lived at home (age 17)
Chris Harper-Mercer (Umpqua Community College) - as his last name already suggests his parents divorced and had shared custody, he continued to live with his mother once he turned 18 and had moved with her to Oregon two years before the shooting and had not seen his dad in those years (age 26)
Jeff Weise (Red Lake) - lived with mom until severe accident leaving her unable to care for him, moved in with dad who committed suicide, lived with grandma who died, lived with grandpa who he killed before shooting (age 16)
One L Goh (Oikos) - parents together while he was under 18, they separated when he was older, he lived near his father, mother had returned to their native Korea shortly before death (age 43)
Steven Kazmierczak (Northern Illinois Uni) - parents together during childhood, mother died and dad living in retirement home at time of shooting (age 27)
John Samir Zawahri (Santa Monica) - parents divorced when young, mom failed to get sole custody, parents had shared custody, he killed his father and brother before shooting (age 23)
Jaylan Ray Fryberg (Marysville) - parents lived at home together (age 15)
Elliot Roger (Santa Barbara) - parents divorced at 7, lived with dad and stepmom, lived by himself at time of shooting (age 22)
So both parents together 9/13, separated but shared custody 2/13, lived with dad 1/13, lived with mom 1/13, and then poor Jeff just got fucked he's in a special category of fuck me up fam
The parentage of school shooters is mostly inline with national statistics in that most live with both parents. It shows an even lower rate of being the children of single mothers. I will assume you are basing your idea of single moms causing school shooters from incel/mgtow talking points as I have seen them before, however although they like to claim "facts don't care about your feelings" they rarely cite their sources or use one cherry picked example to prove their points.
Even if it were true, it would be fascinating to find out your logic as to why male violence can be blamed on women and why single moms are at fault for their children not having fathers, making them entirely responsible for the father's inability to care for their children.
As for "having a good male authority figure is better than having a female one" that just isn't measurable so its a ridiculous argument.
Dylan Klebold (Columbine) - both parents lived in home (age 17)
Eric Harris (Columbine) - both parents lived in home (age 18 )
Seung-Hui Cho (Virginia Tech) - both parents lived at home while Cho was at uni (age 23)
Nikolas Cruz (Parkland) - adopted at birth, both adoptive parents died months before shooting but were together until death, bio mom had drug and violence issues but Nikolas never met her, bio dad unkown (age 19)
Dimitrios Pagourtzis (Santa Fe) - both parents lived at home (age 17)
Chris Harper-Mercer (Umpqua Community College) - as his last name already suggests his parents divorced and had shared custody, he continued to live with his mother once he turned 18 and had moved with her to Oregon two years before the shooting and had not seen his dad in those years (age 26)
Jeff Weise (Red Lake) - lived with mom until severe accident leaving her unable to care for him, moved in with dad who committed suicide, lived with grandma who died, lived with grandpa who he killed before shooting (age 16)
One L Goh (Oikos) - parents together while he was under 18, they separated when he was older, he lived near his father, mother had returned to their native Korea shortly before death (age 43)
Steven Kazmierczak (Northern Illinois Uni) - parents together during childhood, mother died and dad living in retirement home at time of shooting (age 27)
John Samir Zawahri (Santa Monica) - parents divorced when young, mom failed to get sole custody, parents had shared custody, he killed his father and brother before shooting (age 23)
Jaylan Ray Fryberg (Marysville) - parents lived at home together (age 15)
Elliot Roger (Santa Barbara) - parents divorced at 7, lived with dad and stepmom, lived by himself at time of shooting (age 22)
So both parents together 9/13, separated but shared custody 2/13, lived with dad 1/13, lived with mom 1/13, and then poor Jeff just got fucked he's in a special category of fuck me up fam
The parentage of school shooters is mostly inline with national statistics in that most live with both parents. It shows an even lower rate of being the children of single mothers. I will assume you are basing your idea of single moms causing school shooters from incel/mgtow talking points as I have seen them before, however although they like to claim "facts don't care about your feelings" they rarely cite their sources or use one cherry picked example to prove their points.
Even if it were true, it would be fascinating to find out your logic as to why male violence can be blamed on women and why single moms are at fault for their children not having fathers, making them entirely responsible for the father's inability to care for their children.
As for "having a good male authority figure is better than having a female one" that just isn't measurable so its a ridiculous argument.