Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Another look at another ‘troubled’ young man

- By Gerald McOscar Times Guest Columnist Gerald McOscar is an attorney in West Chester.

I’m confused. When did concern about the mental health of cold-blooded murderers override timehonore­d concepts like good and evil, crime and punishment, free will, personal responsibi­lity, and equal justice under the law in the criminal justice system?

Nikolas Cruz, admitted murderer of 17 people at a Florida high school on Valentine’s Day, joins a parade of recent violent criminals whom mental health experts, defense attorneys and credulous judges collective­ly categorize as “troubled,” “struggling,” or beset by “issues.”

Immediate survivors of their carnage, jurists and the larger society are then asked to somehow empathize with the wrongdoers because their lives are blessedly free of the “troubles,” “struggles,” and “issues” that drive these less fortunate to murder That “... but for the grace of God” trope comes to mind.

Mr. Cruz is universall­y described as “troubled.” He terrorized neighbors, fought with family and classmates, and posted violent images on Facebook.

The defense is gathering informatio­n about his mental-health history.

A member of Mr. Cruz’s legal team described him as “deeply disturbed, emotionall­y broken.” No word about how 17 victims’ survivors feel.

I’m not a psychiatri­st, but several decades practicing law have taught me a thing or two about human nature.

I offer an alternate, non-peer-reviewed, admittedly déclassé opinion about Mr. Cruz’s motives and behaviors.

In my opinion Nikolas Cruz is a world-class narcissist.

His world was his alone. He lived by threat, coercion, and violence . His unfortunat­e fellow citizens were all subservien­t to his will. Do as he wished and coexist.

Resist and suffer wrath.

Thomas Stephen Szasz (4/15/20-9/8/12) was a respected Hungarian-American academic, psychiatri­st and psychoanal­yst, and social critic of the moral and scientific foundation­s of psychiatry. His books, “The Myth of Mental Illness” (1961) and “The Manufactur­e of Madness” (1970), set out the arguments most associated with him.

Szasz warned that the concept of disease is fast replacing the concept of personal responsibi­lity.

“We often attribute bad behavior to disease (to excuse his the agent); ….and insist bad behavior called mental illness is a “nofault” act of nature.”

Mr. Cruz, like many of his generation, has thus been favored with readymade excuses for antisocial behavior. He grew up without a father. His mother recently died. He has a right to be angry.

Fine, except this vindicatio­n fails to account for the many children who suffer similar losses that don’t commit murder.

Mr. Cruz’s neighbors bore his trespasses fearing that if they complained he would make their lives worse.

School administra­tors, hands tied by red tape, bureaucrac­y, and cowardice were powerless to act.

Mr. Szász augured that “we prefer a meaningles­s collective guilt to a meaningful individual responsibi­lity.”

Apparently no adult in Mr. Cruz’s life ever had the guts to say, “No!” “Enough!”

Or dare draw a line the sand.

Nikolas Cruz “troubled.”

To the contrary, intimidati­on and violence were his drug and destructiv­e euphoria his high.

Occam’s Razor demands that Mr. Cruz be found guilty of intentiona­l murder and punished accordingl­y.

To seek to palliate the evil he has done is to perpetrate another evil. wasn’t in

“In my opinion Nikolas Cruz is a world-class narcissist.” — Gerald McOscar

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