Serial killer fangirls

Every time I see one of these threads, all I can think of is;

"Are you sexually stimulated by x? There's a paraphilia for that".

Erotonophonophilia refers to the sexual attraction to murder, but I have yet to find a term for the sexual attraction to those who commit such an act. It is so common however I am quite surprised there has not been a term coined for it yet.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybristophilia
 
Its uncomfortable when they are attractive. Its been proven that we as a species have a really hard time thinking hot people are bad people.

"Aw hes so dreamy...look how misunderstood he is. He just needs my love so I can help him get over his demons. Dawwww." Kinda like that, im guessing.
 
R
Eric and Dylan were not bullies. They were bullied. This is according to Brooks Brown, survivor of the Columbine Massacre, who was friends with both Dylan and Eric, and to whom Eric on the day of the massacre warned, "It doesn't matter anymore. Brooks, I like you now. Get out of here. Go home" (Great documentary, by the way.)


There's a video where Eric and Dylan are walking through Columbine's mostly empty hallway with a video recorder. Four or five jocks walk right through the two of them, shoving them out of the way and knocking the recorder.

Here's an article detailing the Columbine culture.

"How accurate is Cullen's book Columbine?"

In case you are intrigued by this, here are a selection of interesting quotes from the Q&A. Or read the entire thing.
In response to this comment

"What outside factors do you think contributed to it?"

About honesty in the media.

"Could you give examples of the bullying culture at Columbine at the time?"





'Australian Twins who carried out a suicide pact wrote to you. How many emotionally disturbed people reach out to you?'

About the Columbine principal, at the time.





'Where were Eric and Dylan in the school hierarchy?'





More on Dave Cullen's book.

One final quote, relevant to this thread. In response to, "Do you think this tragedy will ever stop affecting you?"
Read the book Columbine for their history of bullying classmates.
 
heh i just remembered that ramirez was actually married to a freelance editor, who spammed him with letters and
she wanted to commit suicide when he got executed. thats how crazy she was for him. i think she was also in some kind
of organisation full of women who married prisoners/serial killers? not sure though.
Ramirez was never executed, although he did die in prison a few years ago while still on death row.
 
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Not really sure if he's yet been posted,
but Issei Sagawa weirdly boasted
a pop star career after he roasted
some poor student he graciously hosted

sagawa_101.jpg
 
This phenomena is so well known it even has a name and a Wikipedia article: Hybristophilia. It's nothing new, unfortunately. One of the best-known examples is Ted Bundy. Despite raping and murdering an estimated 30-36+ young women and girls, all between the ages of 15-25 (these are only the murders he was convicted of; he could have committed many more), he still had scores of fangirls after he was arrested and convicted. That's right, these girls were still infatuated with him even though he would fucking murder them if given the chance.

Y'all need Jesus.

My mother was friends with one of the girls Bundy murdered while in Utah, Nancy Wilcox. They never did find her remains.
 
Eric and Dylan were not bullies. They were bullied. This is according to Brooks Brown, survivor of the Columbine Massacre, who was friends with both Dylan and Eric, and to whom Eric on the day of the massacre warned, "It doesn't matter anymore. Brooks, I like you now. Get out of here. Go home" (Great documentary, by the way.)
This account of Columbine is very outdated and biased. More recent accounts thoroughly debunk this school of thought, in particular the 2009 book by Dave Cullen. Harris and Klebold were selfish, nasty, and cruel. They bragged about picking on freshmen and faggots. Every single person on their "enemies lists" had graduated a year before their massacre. There were people who picked on them, but they weren't picked on any more than any other Columbine student. They had "friends" and acquaintances, but they intended to kill them, along with everyone else in the school, and the rescue workers and police who came over. As a matter of fact, since the massacre was primarily planned as a bombing, the body count was intended to be much higher.

Columbine was used as a flashpoint by lots of people, but those people were looking for an issue to bounce their pet causes off, and weren't motivated at all by the truth or real problems. Joe Lieberman blamed the whole thing on Marilyn Manson and violent video games because he's a selfish, retarded demagogue. He was one long before Harris and Klebold, and he'll continue to be until the day he dies and in the afterlife.

"Jeremy" was written eight years before Columbine. I don't know of any time Eddie Vedder talked about Columbine.
I don't particularly care which specific mass murder or revenge fantasy Eddie Vedder was writing about. I find "Jeremy," regardless of its beautiful bass lines, to be utterly reprehensible in message, and from the same toxic school of thought as Picoult and Van Sant.

No one idolizes Adam Lanza because he was a fucking autistic dolt with no life, no prospects, no personality. More deranged than Nick Bate. More egomaniacal and retarded than Chris Chan. Simply, unpleasant in every single way. And ugly as hell too.
While I agree with every horrible thing anyone can say about Adam Lanza, you should never underestimate people's depravity or stupidity. Joe Lieberman's probably assembling a list of every God of War and GTA sequel and gangsta rap album he ever owned right now.
 
I don't particularly care which specific mass murder or revenge fantasy Eddie Vedder was writing about. I find "Jeremy," regardless of its beautiful bass lines, to be utterly reprehensible in message, and from the same toxic school of thought as Picoult and Van Sant.

Jeremy is about a suicide, not a murder.
 
I don't particularly care which specific mass murder or revenge fantasy Eddie Vedder was writing about. I find "Jeremy," regardless of its beautiful bass lines, to be utterly reprehensible in message, and from the same toxic school of thought as Picoult and Van Sant.
It wasn't about a mass murder. It was about a chronically depressed kid that shot himself in front of his class. Vedder wrote it partly out of an attempt to express what the kid was going through and partly to discourage people from doing things like that.
Eddie Veder said:
It came from a small paragraph in a paper which means you kill yourself and you make a big old sacrifice and try to get your revenge. That all you're gonna end up with is a paragraph in a newspaper. Sixty-four degrees and cloudy in a suburban neighborhood. That's the beginning of the video and that's the same thing in the end; it does nothing … nothing changes. The world goes on and you're gone. The best revenge is to live on and prove yourself. Be stronger than those people. And then you can come back
 
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