Sardines
Well-Known Member
This is one of the problems with thinking that good pre-purchase screening for mental health issues is a solution for this type of thing. His mental health issues came on pretty quickly. His identity was meaningfully tied to being a gun guy. He probably held sincere beliefs about the right to own guns. When his mental health crisis started neither he or anyone close to him thought "hey, this is a situation where he needs to be separated from his guns." That's not something pro-2A people think. It probably needs to be.“I have known Rob my whole life,” Card said on Thursday. “He is quiet but the most loving, hardworking, and kind person that I know. But in the past year, he had an acute episode of mental health, and it’s been a struggle.
She said that Robert Card recently began wearing powerful hearing aids to combat hearing loss. Since then, Card said her brother-in-law has been insisting to his family that he can hear people bashing him—including at Just-In-Time Recreation bowling alley and Schemengees Bar and Grill, where he’s accused of gunning down 18 people on Wednesday night.
“He truly believed he was hearing people say things,” she added. “This all just happened within the last few months.”
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Fam Reveals Suspected Gunman’s Link to Maine Massacre Sites
“He just has to reach out and do the right thing,” Robert Card’s sister-in-law told The Daily Beast.www.thedailybeast.com
Several years ago I lost a parent to cancer, shortly after as a result of my emotional (mental health) response I walked out on a very good job. I had several guns. I was depressed. I had a child entering their teen years. I was an avid target shooter. I was a very strong supporter of the 2A. My unemployment caused stress in my relationship and eventually my finances. I sold all of my guns. I told myself that I needed the money since I wasn't working, but I knew that what I really needed was not to have a murder/suicide machine seconds away from me at every emotional moment of my life at that time.
I don't think that's a common response. I think most people maintain the pride that they are responsible gun owners. They know how to handle guns and do it safely. They are one of the good guys with guns.
I've always been responsible with guns. Never more than when I separated myself from them when I was worried that I might become unsafe with them.