Essay On School Shooting

Words: 949
Pages: 4

The fateful day of April Twentieth of 1999 will be remembered for many years to come. Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold walked in to Columbine high school, placing propane bombs within the cafeteria with the intent of blowing up as many people as possible. The boys were also heavily armed with weapons and ammunition, planning to go on a non-discriminatory attack at school, murdering anybody in their path in cold blood. Columbine was not the first school shooting to happen in the United States, but it was the deadliest, gaining attention of the media. This attack had a large impact on the modern-day American high school; specifically, when talking about security within schools. High schools now are on a much higher alert, and are taking precautions …show more content…
So much information is put up online in papers across the nation, and all that is heard is the shooters names. Time magazine released an issue with all victims on the cover. Smaller pictures were shown of the victims themselves, with much larger images of the shooters Eric and Dylan. We know the names of the suspects, but why don’t we know the names of the victims? This is similar to the attack that occurred at Sandy Hook in 2012 with the knowledge of Adam Lanza being the shooter and at the same time not being able to name but one of the victims. The media covers these shootings very quickly, and it is a “race to get the first picture of the murderer” (Gizbert par. 3). This is exactly what many shooters want: “to go out in what they see as a blaze of media glory” (Gizbert par. 8). Seeing the fame that others received from school shootings can set off a mental tipping point for others on the fence, as they could assume they would get the same ending point that the other shooters received. The attacks at Columbine influenced many other shooters, but it also heightened everything negative in school