Ray -
Those are some incredible and incredibly sad statistics. Thanks for posting them.
I was struck by the acceleration within the last 20 years. I didn't take the time to add it all up, but it seems at a glance that the majority of incidents happened since, say, 1990. What does this indicate about the direction that we are headed? (Admittedly, this could be a statistical sampling error - but somehow I suspect not.)
Is there something that CAN be done to reverse this trend? I think that Ryan makes a good point that early identification of potential threats is a place to start. Would Tim McVeigh have been successful in the current war-on-terror climate? Dunno, but maybe not.
Personally, I also think reducing convenience and spur-of-the-moment access will help - at the margin. Reducing the people-killing efficiency of unrestricted weapons might help - at the margin. Making it harder to accumulate personal armouries and arsenals - at the margin. And with rose-coloured glasses firmly in place, hugging our kids and taking them hunting (yes with guns!).
Respectfully,
Dan
Years ago I ended up in a conversation with my parents about all this "murder-suicide" stuff that was being reported on in the early 1990's. To my great surprise my mom said it happened all the time in the logging camps and fishing towns of her youth in OR and WA. They just did not talk about it, and the papers would not print much other than an obituary if even that. Who really cares if some drunk tree cutter killed his wife after some other guy looked at her, and then got all sad and ate a bullet? I had a similar conversation with my dad and he replied the same about rural folks in NC. You did not hear about it unless you knew them. It just was not news back then.
From my own youth in 1981 a young man walked into his sunday school class and killed himself in front of a girl he fawned over. He was an A+ student, almost eagle scout, almost state champ wrestler twice, and well liked by everyone. No obit and no public service. This event should be on one of those tables and its not.
Take the above anecdotal opinions and those tables about school attacks and you can consider that they might not be as well documented as one would think.
Where are we headed? I have no idea. I do know that we are surrounded by slippery slopes on all sides.