I think random nutty acts like this happen more. Where people just snap for no apparent reason other than being mentally unstable. I think you are also right though. I think it's happening more and I think the media amplifies it so the increase seems larger than it really is. It's both. As I said, they sensationalize EVERYTHING.
Maybe, maybe not. Like I said, I don't really know because I can't find statistics on it. School shootings by young kids have been happening since 1853 in America, but Columbine caught people's attention as one of the first major shootings. After that, the media gave attention to every single one that happened. Meanwhile, no one has a clue about the shooting that happened at my school in 1995.
My mom had told me awhile back that, when she was a kid, there was always a random teacher or two that would smack high school girls' asses in the hallway. Probably more than that occurred, but we didn't start hearing about all of these sexual assaults on minors in schools until the media grew into the giant that it is now and jumped on those incidents to broadcast them nationwide.
Do events like the ones mentioned above, in addition to random nutjobs committing massacres, happen more often now than they used to? Again, without statistics, I can't say that they do or don't, but a lot of our perception as to whether they occur more often is likely skewed at least to some degree by the modern media and its technological omnipresence.
But, even if such incidents do occur more often, is that necessarily representative of a generational issue? I don't think so, at least not in regard to James Holmes' actions. I just don't think that a few more ass beatings would have changed the course of events. From all accounts, the guy was normal as a child, has never had any run-ins with the law, and was pretty accomplished academically. Are we suggesting that we beat well-behaved kids more often because it will help prevent psychotic breaks in the future?
I'm all for punishing children when they've done wrong in order to teach them how to do right, but I don't think that's what we have in the case of James Holmes, which is why I think that such events are not representative of a generational issue.
People getting into fights at softball games? Yeah, that speaks a lot to how a person was raised, and is probably a reoccurring event in their lives that goes to show how they've poorly developed over the years as a person. But for a previously normal guy to go apeshit on a theater full of defenseless people? That's mental.