Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Like nearly all other mass shooters, ex-Navy shooter Aaron Alexis was also being treated with psychiatric drugs...

We weren't planning to cover this story until the Associated Press confirmed that Aaron Alexis, the shooter believed responsible for the recent mass shooting at the Navy yard, "had been treated since August by the Veterans Administration for his mental problems."

This is proof that Aaron Alexis was on psychiatric drugs, because that's the only treatment currently being offered by the Veterans Administration for mental problems. Alexis' family members also confirmed to the press that he was being "treated" for his mental health problems. Across the medical industry, "treatment" is the code word for psychiatric drugging.

As Natural News readers well know, the vast majority of mass shooters in U.S. history have all been on mind-altering psychiatric drugs. Those prescription medications create feelings of detachment in people, making them feel like they "playing out a video game" rather than acting out in the real world.

Not coincidentally, Aaron Alexis was also "obsessed with violent video games," reports The Telegraph. Violent video games allow potential shooters to "rehearse" their first-person murderous rampage actions, reinforcing the actions in their brain neurology. It makes the act of killing seem normal, if not habitual.

This combination is repeated over and over again in violent mass killings: psychiatric drugs + video games = mass death. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Every mass shooting over last 20 years has one thing in common...
  2. On school shooters: the Huffington Post doesn't want you to read this...
  3. Unanswered questions about the Batman Colorado theatre massacre...
  4. Taiwanese teen dies after 40-hour Diablo III video game marathon...
  5. This column will change your life: nature and nurture...
  6. Global school shooting timeline...
  7. Tim Kretschmer, another "normal" boy goes on a shooting rampage...
  8. Seung Hui Cho and Virginia Tech ... one year later.

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