Quote Originally Posted by Jaxius._ View Post
You know all this crap about the Gorilla being shot. How come when a school is shot up people aren't like this?
To be fair, those are two completely different scenarios. Despite what protesters are saying, shooting that gorilla wasn't murder, because murder requires malice aforethought. The zookeeper didn't wake up that morning thinking, "Yep. I'm gonna kill a gorilla today, and here's how I'm gonna do it." There was a child in a gorilla compound, and the gorilla could:
a/ Leave the child alone or maybe even look after him, or...
b/ Kill the child, because an adult gorilla has enough strength to rip the arms off a grown man. That's right, Wookiee strength.
...and the zookeeper doesn't have the luxury of time to consider his options. He has to make an immediate decision. Wild animal expert Jack Hanna has even come out in support of the zoo's decision. Honestly, it's one of those "damned if you do, damned if you don't" moments for the zoo. If they didn't shoot the gorilla and the infant is hurt or killed, then the zoo would be condemned for endangering or losing a human life. If they shoot the gorilla, then they're condemned for taking a gorilla life. Either decision sucks, they just had to quickly take what they considered to be the "less sucky" option (i.e. preserving the life of a human child over a gorilla's). You can be sure that the zoo took no pleasure in shooting that gorilla, and the guy who pulled the trigger may need counselling.

A school shooter is nothing more than a cold blooded killer. There is absolutely malicious intent. He would've been planning on the shooting for quite some time and planned it. Purchasing the gun(s) and ammunition, plotting where he would start and his movements, selecting targets and gunning people down. And for what reason? The zookeepers shot the gorilla to save a child, the school shooter isn't saving anyone... he's just murdering people for the sake of killing people. The school shooter wants to shoot people... the zookeepers never wanted the gorilla to die, but they felt that they had little other alternative. A tranquiliser would take 5-10 minutes to take effect and the instant pain from the tranq would enrage the beast. As smart as primates are, we must remember that even those born and raised in captivity are wild animals. These aren't domesticated pets, and there's a reason why even owning one as a pet is illegal in most parts of the world.