We here at MediaWhoresUSA.blogspot, who have been following the often awful tendencies of the "Major Media" for years now, do not necessarily believe that "the media" crossed the line into what singer and Eagles songwriter Don Henley once described in his song "Dirty Laundry" as the media's often ghoulish fascination with mass death - "the bubble headed bleach blond [news anchor]comes on at 5... she will tell yo about the plane crash - with a gleam in her eye."
On the other hand, even within the story of the mass shooting at the Virginia Tech campus, you could tell that the corporate media was sticking to their script: that guns are an American right to self-defense, and that the troubled gunman had fallen through the cracks of the school's and state's public health establishments - but otherwise it is back to BUSINESS AS USUAL, with Virginia remaining a national center for what has been called modern American "gun running."
Without further analyzing the shootings, we will simply let the Student Government speak for the students: they would like to get on with their lives, and if the media networks have IMAGES and STORIES to SELL - let it be of something other than the grieving students on campus. No matter how many couch-potato Americans would bolster TV ratings by getting an endless dose of the emotional/macabre story - please just leave them alone.
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Pastor Urges Va. Tech Back to Campus
Adam Geller and Chris Kahn, AP
April 22, 2007
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20070422/virginia-tech-shooting
BLACKSBURG, Va. — As pastor of Blacksburg Baptist Church, Tommy McDearis was called on to tell more than 20 families a loved one had fallen victim to Virginia Tech gunman Seung-Hui Cho.
On Sunday, he urged his congregation and the university to put the pain of the rampage behind them by returning to classes Monday.
"If we give up in the face of this situation, if we quit doing all of the things that really matter in life because this darkness has visited us, then we are going to surrender to the darkness," McDearis said.
McDearis delivered his sermon Sunday as students who had left school following the massacre returned to campus. He told the story of a professor devastated by the deaths of several of his students at Norris Hall, where Cho killed 30 students and faculty members before turning the gun on himself.
The professor said he didn't know if he could come back. But failing to doing so, he said, would be a betrayal of the memories, hopes and dreams of the victims.
"There is no way that any of them would ever look at us and want us to give up," McDearis said. "We owe them more than to just throw in the towel."
In getting ready for the resumption of classes, the university's student government asked hundreds of reporters to leave campus by Monday morning.
Student government spokeswoman Liz Hart said the campus appreciates the reporting on the Virginia Tech story, but students are ready to move forward.
"The best way to know how to do that is get the campus back to normal," she said. "That includes being able to go back to class, to get back into our normal routine as much as a possible without being held back by anything external, reminding us that it will be a difficult road. We already know it."
Yellow crime-scene tape still surrounded the perimeter of Norris Hall, which will be closed for the rest of the semester. Some people snapped photos of the building; others gazed at it solemnly, with bowed heads.
Elsewhere on campus, students toted laundry and suitcases as they headed for their dorms. On the Drillfield at the center of campus, sophomore Ashleigh Shifflett sat with her sister Regan, a 2005 graduate.
Shifflett left campus Tuesday for her home in Maryland and returned to campus Saturday.
"When we ... could see the campus, we both started crying," Shifflett said. "I was happy to see my family, but I felt like I needed to be here, and when I came back here, it was like I'm home."
Meanwhile, state medical examiners completed autopsies on all 32 victims and Cho. Dr. William Massello, the assistant medical examiner based in Roanoke, said he was not sure whether all the bodies had been released to families, but all were ready.
Cho was not especially accurate with his shots, Massello said, but hit many of the victims several times. His shots caused more than 100 wounds.
The investigation into Cho continues, with computer forensics appearing to play a key role. The gunman, a sullen loner who appeared to have few if any friends, bought ammunition clips on eBay designed for one of two handguns used to kill 32 people and himself.
The eBay account and other Internet activities provide insight into how Cho may have plotted for the rampage, including the purchase of several empty ammo clips about three weeks before the attack.
Hani Durzy, an eBay spokesman, said the purchase of the clips from a Web vendor based in Idaho was legal and that the company has cooperated with authorities. Attempts to reach the Idaho dealer were unsuccessful.
Authorities are also examining the personal computers found in Cho's dorm room and seeking his cell-phone records.
Cho, 23, also used the eBay account to sell items ranging from Hokies football tickets to horror-themed books, some of which were assigned in one of his classes.
A search warrant affidavit filed Friday stated that investigators wanted to search Cho's e-mail accounts, including the address Blazers5505@hotmail.com. Durzy confirmed Cho used the same blazers5505 handle on eBay.
One question investigators hope to answer is whether Cho had any e-mail contact with Emily Hilscher, one of the first two victims. Investigators plan to search her Virginia Tech e-mail account.
On March 22, Cho bought at least two 10-round magazines for the Walther P22. A day later, he made a purchase from a vendor named "oneclickshooting," which sells gun accessories and other items. It appears that he bought three Walther P22 clips in that purchase, but the seller could not be reached for comment.
Cho sold tickets to Virginia Tech sporting events, including last year's Peach Bowl. He sold a Texas Instruments graphics calculator that contained several games, most of them with mild themes.
"The calculator was used for less than one semester then I dropped the class," Cho wrote on the site.
He also sold many books about violence, death and mayhem. Several of those books were used in his English classes, meaning Cho simply could have been selling used books at the end of the semester.
Andy Koch, Cho's roommate from 2005-06, said he never saw Cho receive or send a package, although he didn't have much interaction with the shooter. Students can sign up for a free lottery on a game-by-game basis, and the tickets are free.
"We took him to one football game," he said. "We told him to sign up for the lottery, and he went and he left like in the third quarter, and that was it. He never went again. He never went to another game."
Associated Press writers Kristen Gelineau and Allen G. Breed contributed to this report.
Sunday, April 22, 2007
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