Shopping & Style18 mins ago
Andreas Lubitz
As bad as the terrorists who flew the 9/11 planes?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by joeluke. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's relevant because it tells you whether it was deliberate or not. "sanity" includes planning, organisation, understanding and being able to control your actions (no matter how horrible the action is) and understanding the consequences. We will probably never know how many of those applied to him.
To me the 9/11 terrorists and Lubitz are totally diffrent. The 9/11 killers thought that by killing 'Infidels' they were garanteed a place in paradise.
I think they were sane but very badly misguided.
Lubitz was just insane. Had been treated by 4 diffrent mental health specialists but withheld his illness from his employers and tore up a sick note saying he was not fit to work?
I think they were sane but very badly misguided.
Lubitz was just insane. Had been treated by 4 diffrent mental health specialists but withheld his illness from his employers and tore up a sick note saying he was not fit to work?
joeluke - //Am sick of the actions of suicide cases being justified 'because they were depressed' //
First of all, he was not depressed, he had Depression, which is an entirely different situation.
And second, I don’t think anyone is trying to justify his action on the basis of his illness, merely try to explain it, which is not the same thing.
First of all, he was not depressed, he had Depression, which is an entirely different situation.
And second, I don’t think anyone is trying to justify his action on the basis of his illness, merely try to explain it, which is not the same thing.
I think it was RATTER that once answered the question of suicide on here. He said something along the lines of 'if someone is depressed and suicidal they think of nothing else - no-one else is in the equation except the deed itself and it is done without thought.' I wish I could remember which thread it was, he explained it so well.
There are lots of ways that mentally ill lorry drivers, train drivers or other members of the public could kill many other people at the same time as themselves. Most don't.
It's precisely because most people who are mentally ill don't kill 150 people, that I think we have to recognise Lubitz as being murderous as well as mentally ill.
It's precisely because most people who are mentally ill don't kill 150 people, that I think we have to recognise Lubitz as being murderous as well as mentally ill.
I am in agreement with Ellipsis, especially with his Hamilton in Dunblane analogy.
This pilot was probably depressed, possibly psychotic but also seems to me to be psychopathic too.
(Psychopathy does not prevent or protect you from also being depressed.)
From my reading of the reports of his last few minutes, he cared not a jot about anyone else on board that plane or anywhere else. (his parents and girlfriend for example).
He had decided to kill himself and make sure that he would be (in)famous.
As to comparing him to the 9/11 terrorists, same but different is how I see it.
Neither cared a jot about the others in the plane or in the towers,both wanted to make sure that they were (in)famous.
This pilot was probably depressed, possibly psychotic but also seems to me to be psychopathic too.
(Psychopathy does not prevent or protect you from also being depressed.)
From my reading of the reports of his last few minutes, he cared not a jot about anyone else on board that plane or anywhere else. (his parents and girlfriend for example).
He had decided to kill himself and make sure that he would be (in)famous.
As to comparing him to the 9/11 terrorists, same but different is how I see it.
Neither cared a jot about the others in the plane or in the towers,both wanted to make sure that they were (in)famous.
@ludwing
I can't tell you how many mass murderer's names I have already forgotten because I have forgotten their names.
Sadder to say that I've forgotten some of the incidents too. I suppose that is what search engines are for.
The ones whose names I can remember I do not care to repeat. I was going to mention the Swedish island thing as an example of spree-killers but you posted first.
Thinking back to 'Cracker', the Albie character: wasn't there something about sentimentality at the root of his vengefulness? (Dramatic licence, or straight from the real-world manual?)
I can't tell you how many mass murderer's names I have already forgotten because I have forgotten their names.
Sadder to say that I've forgotten some of the incidents too. I suppose that is what search engines are for.
The ones whose names I can remember I do not care to repeat. I was going to mention the Swedish island thing as an example of spree-killers but you posted first.
Thinking back to 'Cracker', the Albie character: wasn't there something about sentimentality at the root of his vengefulness? (Dramatic licence, or straight from the real-world manual?)