TIME Magazine phones it in - and gets a wrong number.
Actually, they get a lot of numbers wrong. And yet the introduction shows so much promise of someone who might actually "get it".
Possibly the only reason to read the editorial, or even click the link in the first place, is to see the very pretty graphic the art department came up with. I wonder if you could get that done in Cerakote?
Go ahead, click the link and look at the pretty paint job.
stay safe.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2121660,00.html
Actually, they get a lot of numbers wrong. And yet the introduction shows so much promise of someone who might actually "get it".
Possibly the only reason to read the editorial, or even click the link in the first place, is to see the very pretty graphic the art department came up with. I wonder if you could get that done in Cerakote?
Go ahead, click the link and look at the pretty paint job.
stay safe.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2121660,00.html
After the ghastly act of terrorism against a Sikh temple in Wisconsin on Aug. 5, Americans are pondering how to stop gun violence. We have decided that it is, in the words of New York Times columnist David Brooks, a problem of psychology, not sociology. We are trying to fathom the evil ideology of Wade Michael Page. Only several weeks ago, we were all trying to understand the twisted psychology of James Holmes, the man who killed 12 innocents at a movie theater in Aurora, Colo. Before that it was the mania of Jared Loughner, who shot Congresswoman Gabby Giffords last year.
Certainly we should try to identify such people and help treat and track them. But aside from the immense difficulty of such a task--there are millions of fanatical, crazy people, and very few turn into mass murderers--it misses the real problem.