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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 7:31 pm
Valheita Vajapocalypse Valheita Vajapocalypse Valheita Based on the story, the mouse died pretty quickly. I mean, if blood went everywhere, it's a safe bet the mouse was thoroughly dead after the first one. Based on the story there's no proof it died quickly. Blood going everywhere doesn't mean insta death. Assuming the guy stomped it once and blood spurted out. The mouse could still be alive and just bleeding out. Slow and painful. Also, we don't know where he stomped down on it. What if it was just the lower region? The tail would still be attached and the mouse would be in too much pain and stress to fight back. So you're assuming the worst because the kid killed it? Be less worried about him, and more worried about those that cheered for it's death. The kid was the one that committed the act and according to the story wasn't doing it out of necessity or felt remorse for it. The people cheering didn't help in it and therefore aren't as much of a risk. The story doesn't contain enough detail to assume that there wasn't an act of necessity on the boys part. He may not have felt catching it was an option. (Mice are slippery little bastards, hence why I used traps) Murder can in and of itself be a good act. But delighting in murder. In cheering it on. That's sociopathy. Quote: the boy then picks up the mouse by the tail, shows it to everyone and starts laughing. Sounds pretty sociopathic to me since that sentence indicates that the boy started laughing. Chances are the students that joined in laughing started after the boy did. That just makes them dumb and group oriented not sociopathic.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 7:33 pm
Vajapocalypse Valheita Vajapocalypse Valheita Vajapocalypse Based on the story there's no proof it died quickly. Blood going everywhere doesn't mean insta death. Assuming the guy stomped it once and blood spurted out. The mouse could still be alive and just bleeding out. Slow and painful. Also, we don't know where he stomped down on it. What if it was just the lower region? The tail would still be attached and the mouse would be in too much pain and stress to fight back. So you're assuming the worst because the kid killed it? Be less worried about him, and more worried about those that cheered for it's death. The kid was the one that committed the act and according to the story wasn't doing it out of necessity or felt remorse for it. The people cheering didn't help in it and therefore aren't as much of a risk. The story doesn't contain enough detail to assume that there wasn't an act of necessity on the boys part. He may not have felt catching it was an option. (Mice are slippery little bastards, hence why I used traps) Murder can in and of itself be a good act. But delighting in murder. In cheering it on. That's sociopathy. Quote: the boy then picks up the mouse by the tail, shows it to everyone and starts laughing. Sounds pretty sociopathic to me since that sentence indicates that the boy started laughing. Chances are the students that joined in laughing started after the boy did. That just makes them dumb and group oriented not sociopathic. It's still terrible It shows a loss of fear of taking another thing's life I agree with you Vaja This guy has problems .__.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 8:04 pm
Vajapocalypse Quote: the boy then picks up the mouse by the tail, shows it to everyone and starts laughing. Sounds pretty sociopathic to me since that sentence indicates that the boy started laughing. Chances are the students that joined in laughing started after the boy did. That just makes them dumb and group oriented not sociopathic. I said cheering, not laughing. Laughter would be a... fairly natural response I would imagine. Murder creates tension, laughter is a good way to release tension. Sociopathy can't be identified during childhood, fun fact. Anyway. I guess I've got to go become a mass murder now, since I've killed mice and felt no remorse about the matter. Bye guys.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 8:10 pm
Valheita Vajapocalypse Quote: the boy then picks up the mouse by the tail, shows it to everyone and starts laughing. Sounds pretty sociopathic to me since that sentence indicates that the boy started laughing. Chances are the students that joined in laughing started after the boy did. That just makes them dumb and group oriented not sociopathic. I said cheering, not laughing. Laughter would be a... fairly natural response I would imagine. Murder creates tension, laughter is a good way to release tension. Sociopathy can't be identified during childhood, fun fact. Anyway. I guess I've got to go become a mass murder now, since I've killed mice and felt no remorse about the matter. Bye guys. dramallama
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 8:12 pm
Vajapocalypse Valheita Vajapocalypse Quote: the boy then picks up the mouse by the tail, shows it to everyone and starts laughing. Sounds pretty sociopathic to me since that sentence indicates that the boy started laughing. Chances are the students that joined in laughing started after the boy did. That just makes them dumb and group oriented not sociopathic. I said cheering, not laughing. Laughter would be a... fairly natural response I would imagine. Murder creates tension, laughter is a good way to release tension. Sociopathy can't be identified during childhood, fun fact. Anyway. I guess I've got to go become a mass murder now, since I've killed mice and felt no remorse about the matter. Bye guys. dramallama xd It's hyperbole Vaja.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 9:41 pm
Quite the story there. Reminds me of the time I....umm...roasted a rat for 2 min in a small conventional oven in my house. That rat was tormenting the snacks in my house for about a month. It was one night at 2am in the morning when I heard rustling sounds coming from the kitchen. I triangulate the sounds to the oven..........and then closed the door on it. No sooner when I did that did the rat start panicking inside. I didn't want it to escape. It was a fast one. And I was so close. So I...uhh....turned the heat on. It was an old small oven that we bought at a thrift store though. So naturally, the button was stuck and I couldn't get it to stop. Those were some really scary screams. Soon it was over though. We had to throw away the oven after that. xd It's not like I wanted to kill it, but I couldn't have caught it if I opened the oven. Not to mention that it's littered the house nonstop since its presence. You definitely don't want me to describe the smell and the look of the mouse. Horrifying.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 9:49 pm
That's horrible. I'd have been one of the people crying.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 10:02 pm
I hate mice.
But I wouldn't kill one like that.
That was disgusting. And sick.
And wtf, Valheita.
Sociopaths start displaying signs in childhood. Where on Earth did you hear otherwise? Sociopaths feel no remorse or guilt or compassion. They start poking and prodding insects and animals. . . and they do very unpleasant things.
There's a difference between what that kid did and what a sociopath is, though. A sociopath would do that sort of thing in the privacy of his own home. That kid is just a jerk.
I'm going to move this to SD only because the idea of what happened can be upsetting (it made me uncomfortable, so I'm sure it did the same for others).
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 11:24 pm
Valheita Vajapocalypse Valheita Vajapocalypse Quote: the boy then picks up the mouse by the tail, shows it to everyone and starts laughing. Sounds pretty sociopathic to me since that sentence indicates that the boy started laughing. Chances are the students that joined in laughing started after the boy did. That just makes them dumb and group oriented not sociopathic. I said cheering, not laughing. Laughter would be a... fairly natural response I would imagine. Murder creates tension, laughter is a good way to release tension. Sociopathy can't be identified during childhood, fun fact. Anyway. I guess I've got to go become a mass murder now, since I've killed mice and felt no remorse about the matter. Bye guys. dramallama xd It's hyperbole Vaja. XP I know but I felt that the drama llama best illustrated my thoughts concerning your comment. And most kids can't be given an absolute mental diagnosis during childhood it doesn't mean the symptoms can't be identified.
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Posted: Fri Sep 11, 2009 11:42 pm
redface I'm guilty of catching bugs in disposable water bottles and then throwing them away... Animals, I tend to let them go...
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Posted: Mon Oct 05, 2009 8:38 am
Poor little rat didn't deserve to die like that! scream
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Posted: Thu Oct 08, 2009 3:01 pm
_Z A C K Yx CH0Z0 I'd say the 2nd option, since the first and last one are quite insulting. That's just weird though, mice are cute. This. I could never purposely hurt an animal. :c Me neither. I once stepped on half a worm when I was waiting for the bus.Looked down and saw it struggle and stuff.Teared up before I went to school.Had a bad feeling through the morning,and whenever I remember it. ;-; Poor wormy.
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