Somewhat sideways to the topic of gun violence,
netmouse pointed me to an interesting article on gender and violence. Here it is: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jackson-katz/men-gender-gun-violence_b_2308522.html -- go read it, think about it, and you can come back and tell us what you think about the gendering of violent tendencies.
EDITED TO ADD: Apropos to this topic: Bushmaster's "Man Card" campaign for the rifle used at Newton. The campaign has since been taken down from their website (which does show some compassion on their part), but buzzfeed has captures from it: http://www.buzzfeed.com/scott/bushmasters-shockingly-awful-man-card-campaign
EDITED TO ADD: Apropos to this topic: Bushmaster's "Man Card" campaign for the rifle used at Newton. The campaign has since been taken down from their website (which does show some compassion on their part), but buzzfeed has captures from it: http://www.buzzfeed.com/scott/bushmasters-shockingly-awful-man-card-campaign
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Farther down, it says:
"The gender gap in personal gun ownership is wider than that seen for household ownership, as 46% of all adult men vs. 23% of all women say they personally own a gun."
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But in some ways, the gender gap in ownership isn't all that relevant when it comes to talking about mass killings with firearms. If, statistically, twice as many men own guns than do women, then we still have the question of why that is: is it societal, is it biological, is it something else entirely? And given that statistic, there are lots of women out there who own a gun, yet we don't see an equivalent 2-to-1 ratio in the gender of those who commit these "spree" killings, so the gender gap doesn't shed any light on the "why" of that. It doesn't matter what the percentage is, high or low: except in rare cases, women don't commit spree shootings.
Why?
Perhaps graphing out the frequency of these killings against economic data could show some correlation -- but correlation isn't causation. Does media coverage cause "copycat" incidences? Is there any correlation in family size for the killers, or upbringing, or religious background, or social class, or family history, or mental health, or peer relationships, or... the mind boggles at the myriad factors that have an influence on a personality, even if you're just looking at males.