I got curious about this of course, since the guy for some reason seemed to have no motive at all. After some digging, I still don't know shit about him. I'm left with even more questions about this.
Why did he kill a dozen people?
How did he get onto a military post with a large shotgun and thirty shells?
What about that guy they said may have been helping him? That just kind of disappeared didn't it?
What the fuck was with the order to stand down?
What is his background? What kind of a guy was he? Did he have a father and mother? History of mental illness?
WHY AND HOW? I WANT TO KNOW AND THE PISS STREAM MEDIA IS NOT PROVIDING ANSWERS LIKE THEY'RE SUPPOSED TO!
I understand his motivation was intrinsic. As opposed to the mass shootings in Kenya which was motivated extrinsically.
I believe he had a military naval career which was cut short due to some disciplinary action. That is one bone of contention. I believe he was working within the naval base for a temp agency doing some menial task. Adding insult to injury. It has also been reported that he was present during 9/11 and helped with the rescue of injured victims. Possible PTSD ?
I can see how he might feel badly treated by the military and working in that environment doing a civilian job would only amplify these feelings. If he had no one to talk to about this then those feelings would build up and occupy more and more of his conscious mind. Anger, rage, disgruntled, feeling of being 'wronged', jealousy of military personnel, If it is true about 9/11 and possibly PTSD as an added ingredient then I guess he was a ticking time bomb.
Looking at trying to prevent future instances I would suggest ex military, particularly those who's career has been blocked due to misconduct or resulting in disciplinary action, are offered some support. Possibly even deterring them from taking civilian jobs within a military environment.
Incidentally I feel all ex military do not get nearly enough help. Not really talking about that man now, but just 'in general'. I know in the UK there are many on the streets, whose marriage has failed, who struggled to get a job simply because they struggled to cope on civvy street. Struggled without the routine and structure offered by, the army, for example.
I don't think the general public appreciate what soldiers do. The things they endure and the price they pay, sometimes the ultimate price. At the end of their career they are just tossed aside. Adjusting is not always easy. They deserve better.