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In reply to the discussion: Those who stigmatize mental illness are harming my family, they can all fuck off. [View all]dogknob
(2,431 posts)48. Bro
Rodger Elliott was not mentally ill.
He was a Bro with Bro values, Bro cynical worldview, and Bro attitudes toward women.
A fucking garden-variety, pathetic Bro.
When a Bro realizes that the world is outgrowing his Bro bullshit and leaving him behind, he seeks ways to display his puny Bro power over the people who he feels should be his inferiors, but are to blame for his inability to be a billionaire or get laid.
That's why Bros have to take other people with them when they realize the jig is up.
After they and their victims are gone, other Bros start babbling about mental illness because there's no way they are like that loser.
Until they lose.
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Those who stigmatize mental illness are harming my family, they can all fuck off. [View all]
Bjorn Against
May 2014
OP
There's nothing wrong with locking up someone who is a danger to himself and others
JJChambers
May 2014
#4
It says a lot about you that you would ask me to step back from an issue that effects my family
Bjorn Against
May 2014
#10
Someone who has been involuntarily committed is flagged and cannot buy a gun
JJChambers
May 2014
#44
and YOU don't have a frickin' clue what you are talking about. none. zip. zilch. zero.
cali
May 2014
#5
If homicidal ideation is grounds for involuntary committed, then a significant amount of our society
TexasTowelie
May 2014
#14
I don't know the specific details in Texas, but I believe there are similar requirements.
TexasTowelie
May 2014
#90
One may wonder your own reaction should you be committed (rightly or wrongly) involuntarily.
LanternWaste
May 2014
#98
I think we should have a way to distinguish mentally ill people like your brother
pnwmom
May 2014
#9
That part about him accumulating an arsenal is where the problem should have been dealt with
Bjorn Against
May 2014
#12
If Elliot Rodger had been involuntarily committed he would have been barred from purchasing a gun
JJChambers
May 2014
#15
They're more like to end up in prisons if they don't get treatment from hospitals and
pnwmom
May 2014
#80
Do you object to 3 day involuntary commitments for people whose family and/or doctors
pnwmom
May 2014
#32
It would reduce the numbers available, particularly of assault weapons. The fact that
pnwmom
May 2014
#81
Any limits are only as good as what the government knows about a person in order to judge
Lee-Lee
May 2014
#83
You have no business even suggesting my family may be "shielding" my brother
Bjorn Against
May 2014
#85
I am not sure about this shielding. Having dealt with the mentally ill, up to and through the courts
freshwest
May 2014
#95
Assuming his brother is dangerous merely due to mental illness is bigotry. Period.
nomorenomore08
May 2014
#94
There is a vast difference between a 3 day involuntary commitment, based on evidence
pnwmom
May 2014
#35
It didn't use to be this way....AND families had better options...you didn't JUST have to decide
VanillaRhapsody
May 2014
#50
I don't have an answer, but for years we locked up the mentally ill, and...
TreasonousBastard
May 2014
#29
Each day on DU, there are some pretty nasty things said about Republicans in general.
1000words
May 2014
#51
"let's not pretend that it would only be people like him that would be locked away". THANK you for
uppityperson
May 2014
#38
How can your family be under attack by people on message boards on the internet?
treestar
May 2014
#41
Mental illness and hyper-machismo certainly aren't mutually exclusive, though. Just saying.
nomorenomore08
May 2014
#69
As I've said before, it seems to have been a "perfect storm" of malign influences.
nomorenomore08
May 2014
#74