Is it possible that the American people have over many generations come to behave the same way its government behaves around the world?
On Monday, a young woman named Audrey Elizabeth Hale went to her childhood private Christian school with two lawfully acquired assault weapons and a pistol. She murdered Hallie Scruggs (9), William Kinney (9). Evelyn Dieckhaus(9), Cynthia Peak (61) Mike Hill (61), and head teacher Katherine Koonce (60) at the Covenant Baptist School, in Nashville, USA.
“We have a manifesto. We have some writings that we’re going over that pertain to this day, the actual incident. We have a map drawn out about how this was all going to take place,” said Metropolitan Nashville Police Chief John Drake as he watched the children being removed from the Baptist Church-run Covenant school. “I was literally, moved to tears,” he explained. Three children, each nine, and three elderly adults who had roles in running the school, what should have been a safe place to be, were all murdered.
Killing people is a certain way of thinking bred by the U.S.A.
“Everyone is in shock.”
“It is a sad fact of life that Americans have been raised to accept mass murder as a way of life,” said Dale Carter of the RINJ Foundation, a global women’s rights NGO. The comment followed an assessment of the mass murder at the Covenent School in Nashville, USA. Metropolitan Nashville Police photo. Photo is cropped and enhanced for color density. Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective-Magazine
American politicians who favour presenting their families as war-weapon toting killers. Is it possible that the American people have over many generations come to behave the same way its government behaves around the world?
Feminine-Perspective: “How can we help the ordinary American people who, daily, suffer great loss within a culture that encourages senseless killing that enables fat-cats staying filthy rich, and an evil men’s cult residing in Washington DC for an eternity,” asked Dale Carter, rhetorically.
America was born in extreme violence. Now the U.S. is renowned for its daily violence.
“A mass murder is defined as the killing of three or more people at one time and in one location. The serial murder is the killing of three or more people in more than a 30-day period with a significant cooling-off period between the murders. A spree murder is the killing of three or more people usually within a 30-day period and typically during the course of another felony (such as a robbery),” said the U.S. Department of Justice, in 2001, in “Mass Murders of the USA”, a 153-page Issue Overview.
This message in a book to the American people from the U.S. Department of Justice actually describes the mass murders in Iraq to come in 2003, twenty years ago where an estimated 1.2 million Iraqis were killed by a U.S.-led despicable mass murder coalition that murdered and pilfered its way across Iraq. The Iraqis were pilfered of their riches which were sold all around the world for personal profit within the U.S. military establishment.
North Korea, an Orwellian State run by Kim il-Sung, from 1948 through 1987, suffered losses up to 3.5 million largely due to American carpet bombing of the civilian population in the early 1950s.
The Wilson Center supported by a North Korean census report found in Russian archives, published the confirmed estimate that North Korea lost 20% of its population during the Korean War of 1950-53.
According to 1953 figures of the Central Statistic Administration of the DPRK, obtained by the Wilson Center’s Cold War International history Project (CWIHP), the country’s population declined from 9,368,592 in 1948 to 7,425,939 in 1953.
“Over a period of three years or so, we killed off — what — 20 percent of the population,” Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay, head of the Strategic Air Command during the Korean War, told the Office of Air Force History in 1984.
“Dean Rusk, a supporter of the war and later secretary of state, said the United States bombed “everything that moved in North Korea, every brick standing on top of another.” After running low on urban residential targets, U.S. bombers destroyed hydroelectric and irrigation dams in the later stages of the war, flooding farmland and destroying crops. (Citing the Washington Post Newspaper, 25 March, 2015)
And VOX, “Americans have forgotten what we did to North Korea.”
“Although the ferocity of the bombing was criticized as racist and unjustified elsewhere in the world, it was never a big story back home. U.S. press coverage of the air war focused, instead, on “MiG alley,” a narrow patch of North Korea near the Chinese border. There, in the world’s first jet-powered aerial war, American fighter pilots competed against each other to shoot down five or more Soviet-made fighters and become “aces.” War reporters rarely mentioned civilian casualties from U.S. carpet-bombing. It is perhaps the most forgotten part of a forgotten war.” (The Washington Post Newspaper, 25 March, 2015)
In Vietnam, the devastation by an American War featured over 1.3 million confirmed dead. Including civilians in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos is a different story.
Scholars Guenter Lewy and R. J. Rummel have estimated on the high side, 3,595,000 deaths due to the American Vietnam War in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos (1954–1975).
Archived photography shows the civilian communities of Pyongyang destroyed by U.S. Carpet Bombing in 1953. The mass murders continue. Photo Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective-Magazine
Opening video scene where carnage unfolded Monday in Nashville. Just another day in America. Authors have been writing books about American violence for at least a dozen generations. Photo Art/Cropping/Enhancement: Rosa Yamamoto / Feminine-Perspective-Magazine
“America is now screwing up the entire world population with the proliferation of nuclear weapons and weapons-grade uranium-235 production to power nuke submarines that are intended to carry nuclear weapons and other WMD for war. This is happening in an angry world where a few opportunists in the weapons business live in huge bunkers impervious to the harm they create, and the rest of us either cough up our guts in a waning, destabilizing coronavirus pandemic, or going to the cupboard and finding it barren of food and water. Joe Biden, likely the worst leader the human race has ever seen, is nuts pressing all his war buttons. It is far more complicated than what the sleepy-Joe in the White House contemplates,” summed up Dale Carter of the RINJ Foundation.
Additional reading:
Nashville attack and the assault weapons ban