@Lolowut
If your stance on this is: '100s die in Africa, and all you're doing is crying about 27 lives' then consider that no amount of care, prayer, or money will prevent this from happening (hilariously, if I do the 3rd it could exasperate the issue since most aid winds up in the wrong hands anyways). The only reasoning you have of taking such stance is to make yourself seem morally/philosophically superior. Arrogance is at its height to those whom try to seem morally/philosophically superior.
100.000 deaths a day, minimum, more than half of them children, dying directly or indirectly on malnutrion . You claim it to be inevitable here and at the same time school X in morality. Using the correct adjectives to describe that would probably get me banned.
But let me tell you this:
Either you are A, totally naive and ignorant about the real reasons behind the underfeeding in the forgotten continent Africa. (which I expect to be true)
or B, totally biased making distinctions in humans, valueing the life of a USAmerican more than the life of someone else, particularily some faraway lobbyless Africans (which i also expect to be true)
or C, you are aware of either of one and hypocritically campaign against X for not mainstreaming with you on this topic. (which I hope is at most only partly true)
I will try to enlighten you all on that topic in easy comprehensible words. Africa's kids don't die because they can't be fed by Africans. They die because we dont let them be fed by Africans. We (the industrialized countries), simply don't allow them to feed themselves. The only sector in which third world countries can compete with our highly developed industries is the agrarian sector. Now what i want from you is too google the amout of subsidies that are put in that sector each year by the industrialized countries, you would be surprised. If you have only average intelligence and logic to add together what that means, your conclusion should be evident, if not i will help you out:
Those subsidies lead to low prices for mass produced staple food. On african markets, european or US produced food will be cheaper (thanks to subsidies), than the local competition for the African buyer. The African buyer therefore will tend to their produce and ignore the local. What does that mean for the African farmer now?
He can not sell his produce since he has to compete with price dumping, so he has to change his produce. Now what is he going to produce next? He is going into cash crop. That means luxury articles for industrialized markets, above all coffee, but lately also biofuel (yes, a new pervesion, we drive on what other people can't afford to eat)
Now i want you to google again, which product on earth has the second highest global revenue, just right after oil. Again I am sure you a highly surprised.
The interest we (industrial countries) have in the African continent is solely exploitational. Ressources and cash crop, shipped out leaving almost nothing for the local markets.
Justifying this monetarian gain with "inevitablitly" is the outrageous act.
So next time you pour a hypocritical tirade of outrage upon X for rightly disagreeing on this collective hysterical dismay upon the death of a two dozen people, just because you people aren't able to get gun control laws straight once and for all, think first and inform yourself.
Don't misunderstand me, what happened is tragic in its own, they all have been inoncent victims of the psychological disorder of another, but they lived in a country where they had more options to change the fate of themselves more than the average African.
If your stance on this is: 'Well, if America just had gun control laws...' then consider the fact killing a room full of people can be done in a multitude of ways. Using household items, I could create a pipe bomb or a makeshift frag grenade. I could legally buy enough chemicals to not only kill the room, but the entire school by simply getting gasses ventilated. Probably could do it through household items too, make it untraceable. To buy assault weapons (automatics, the ones most commonly used by crimes of this sort) I require a license. To get a license I must take a class, and sometimes go through psych screening. I'm tracked by state and fed governments. Out of all the options I've described, the automatic gun takes the longest amount of time, is the most expensive, and the easiest to track.
I could argue with you with you about the necessity of gun control solely with your logic. If you don't think that gun control is necessary, because it wouldn't change a thing (which is absurd), I will ask you this:
Why not make nuclear weapons or material accessible for everyone? Everyone willing to buy it should require a license and a class and and psych screening.
I am sure that you believe gun accesibility is some secret divine right for the US citizen and you would be less hypocritical in arguing that way "Yes i know guns kill people, I know we would have far less violent deaths than without them, but i like to shoot my guns, its makes me feel great"
I would have less problems with that point of view, it would be at least coherent.
So in case all that went past you and you doubt that stricter gun laws will lead to less violent deaths read some more studies like this one:
http://www.jhsph.edu/research/centers-and-institutes/johns-hopkins-center-for-gun-policy-and-research/publications/WhitePaper102512_CGPR.pdf , since i don't want to chew through all that again.
Finally to return to the topic I give you a picture since it worth more than 1000 words.
or
or to be more in your christian indoctrinated logic