Tumbler Ridge

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
12,524
1,446
113
61
Alberta
Or some other fucking tragedies. A statistical one-in-a-million shot tells you nothing about the group from which the person comes or with which the person identifies.

If the group is significant, it should be noted that, down hereabouts anyhow, most mass shooters are young (21-30) heterosexual White men.
I'm not equating it to mass shooters, I'm saying expect more tragedies and violent acts from the "Trans community," because most of the violent ones aren't actually trans, they're mentally ill, who were told their trans.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Taxslave2

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
12,524
1,446
113
61
Alberta
Within hours of the first reports, many commentators did what they almost always do in crime coverage: they started sketching the perpetrator in demographic shorthand. Age. Appearance. Sex. In some accounts, the suspect was described as “female.” In others, as a “female with brown hair, wearing a dress.” Female wasn’t a throwaway adjective. It was part of the mental picture readers were being asked to form.

The adjective “female” stuck out. Not because women are incapable of violence, but because in this specific category of atrocity, female perpetrators are rare enough that the descriptor does cognitive work. Your brain can’t help it. It starts asking: What’s different here? What explains the outlier? You don’t have to like that instinct for it to be real.

If a newsroom believes sex is relevant enough to include in the first wave of reporting, relevant enough to help the public picture the perpetrator when our only context is “18,” “female,” “dress” and “brown hair,” then sex can’t become irrelevant the moment it gets complicated.

Either the public deserves a clear picture of who we’re discussing, or it doesn’t. Either sex is useful context, or it’s not. Treating “female” as a singularly normal adjective while treating “trans” as unspeakable isn’t neutral reporting. The rule here isn’t “always mention it” or “never mention it.” It’s relevance, consistency, and honesty about what you’re doing.

If an identity marker doesn’t clarify the story, leave it out. If it does clarify the picture you’ve already asked readers to form, then say it plainly once it’s confirmed, instead of letting people piece it together through rumour and resentment. In any story about such an atrocity, being “trans” is at least as relevant as being “female.”
Unfortunately, it's not about a clear picture, it's about narrative.
Follow the narrative.
You are Number 5.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
61,277
9,989
113
Washington DC
I'm not equating it to mass shooters, I'm saying expect more tragedies and violent acts from the "Trans community," because most of the violent ones aren't actually trans, they're mentally ill, who were told their trans.
So, do we blame the trans community or the mental-illness community?

I know! How about True Dope? Let's blame him!
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,524
4,113
113
Edmonton
Personally, I hate to disagree with the trans community, whoever the fuck they are, but I think the approach to grow the community and normalize it is going to lead to a lot of fucked up people. I've heard quite a few cases already of people who transitioned, cutting off their biological parts, only to find out they were suffering from mental illnesses like clinical depression, bipolar disorder, or schizophrenia. Expect more of these tragedies.
And lawsuits as well. It appears that those who are in the process of de transitioning are doing so because they've been lied to. Huh, who knew??? (snark).
 
  • Like
Reactions: Taxslave2

Taxslave2

Senate Member
Aug 13, 2022
5,310
2,936
113
If a newsroom believes sex is relevant enough to include in the first wave of reporting, relevant enough to help the public picture the perpetrator when our only context is “18,” “female,” “dress” and “brown hair,” then sex can’t become irrelevant the moment it gets complicated.
this is much how police would write it if the person of interest was at large.WHen they already know the person of interest is already dead, it seeems a bit odd.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
39,837
3,749
113
Significant brain damage to child shot in Tumbler Ridge: Mom
Maya Gebala remains in critical condition at B.C. Children's Hospital in Vancouver, following surgery for multiple gunshot wounds

Author of the article:Brian Towie
Published Feb 16, 2026 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

Maya Gebala, 12. is fighting for her life in a B.C. hospital. Facebook
Maya Gebala, 12. is fighting for her life in a B.C. hospital. Facebook Photo by Facebook /Facebook
Maya Gebala, the 12-year-old girl fighting for her life after the Tumbler Ridge shooting on Feb. 10, has significant damage to the left side of her brain, her mother Cia Edmonds posted in a Facebook update.


Maya was shot in the Tumbler Ridge, B.C., mass shooting that resulted in the deaths of nine people, including the shooter. Maya is one of the 27 people injured in the shooting. She remains in critical condition at B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver, following surgery for multiple gunshot wounds.


“There’s damage to her brain stem from where the bullet exited,” Edmonds wrote. “Because of the damage and swelling surrounding it, it is hard to say how much response and deliberate function she will be able to regain, however, we are hopeful. There’s significant damage to the left side of her brain, that is where the bullet entered and exited, it tore right through.”

Progress ‘uplifting’
Edmonds says though her progress is encouraging, she fears Maya’s condition could take a turn for the worse.

“The progress is so uplifting, I dread the day it plateaus,” Edmonds writes. “She has been cleared for a feeding tube and is (thankfully) not considered to pass in the immediate future. There are still many fears. There are still risks her heart could stop … there is fluid build up in her lungs, or of course … She may just stop progressing, and this is it.


“There are a lot of positives, of course, but this recovery won’t be linear. I still sing to her. Talk to her, tell her how proud we are and that the entire world is cheering her on.”

Edmonds notes the worldwide love and support her family has received is making a major difference when Maya’s outlook was at its darkest.

“I believe that positive energy and prayer has helped her to rise above the imminent and dire initial expectations,” she writes. “We cannot stop now, we have so far to go yet.”


Please let Maya rest, family says
While Edmonds says the support for Maya is welcome, she wants well-wishers to refrain from visit her.

“Hey I have caught wind of a post that was made regarding a person wanting to fill several buses with people to come visit maya???” she wrote. “That is very unacceptable. There are other children and families with their own flavor of tragedy and the last thing they need is to feel bombarded.. Maya also needs rest.”

GoFundMe for Maya, teammate
A GoFundMe page for Maya and another for the family her teammate and her 13-year-old friend Ezekiel Schofield, who was killed in the shooting, have been set up for those who wish to donate. As of Monday afternoon, more than $420,000 has been raised for Maya.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,672
14,743
113
Low Earth Orbit
Significant brain damage to child shot in Tumbler Ridge: Mom
Maya Gebala remains in critical condition at B.C. Children's Hospital in Vancouver, following surgery for multiple gunshot wounds

Author of the article:Brian Towie
Published Feb 16, 2026 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

Maya Gebala, 12. is fighting for her life in a B.C. hospital. Facebook
Maya Gebala, 12. is fighting for her life in a B.C. hospital. Facebook Photo by Facebook /Facebook
Maya Gebala, the 12-year-old girl fighting for her life after the Tumbler Ridge shooting on Feb. 10, has significant damage to the left side of her brain, her mother Cia Edmonds posted in a Facebook update.


Maya was shot in the Tumbler Ridge, B.C., mass shooting that resulted in the deaths of nine people, including the shooter. Maya is one of the 27 people injured in the shooting. She remains in critical condition at B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver, following surgery for multiple gunshot wounds.


“There’s damage to her brain stem from where the bullet exited,” Edmonds wrote. “Because of the damage and swelling surrounding it, it is hard to say how much response and deliberate function she will be able to regain, however, we are hopeful. There’s significant damage to the left side of her brain, that is where the bullet entered and exited, it tore right through.”

Progress ‘uplifting’
Edmonds says though her progress is encouraging, she fears Maya’s condition could take a turn for the worse.

“The progress is so uplifting, I dread the day it plateaus,” Edmonds writes. “She has been cleared for a feeding tube and is (thankfully) not considered to pass in the immediate future. There are still many fears. There are still risks her heart could stop … there is fluid build up in her lungs, or of course … She may just stop progressing, and this is it.


“There are a lot of positives, of course, but this recovery won’t be linear. I still sing to her. Talk to her, tell her how proud we are and that the entire world is cheering her on.”

Edmonds notes the worldwide love and support her family has received is making a major difference when Maya’s outlook was at its darkest.

“I believe that positive energy and prayer has helped her to rise above the imminent and dire initial expectations,” she writes. “We cannot stop now, we have so far to go yet.”


Please let Maya rest, family says
While Edmonds says the support for Maya is welcome, she wants well-wishers to refrain from visit her.

“Hey I have caught wind of a post that was made regarding a person wanting to fill several buses with people to come visit maya???” she wrote. “That is very unacceptable. There are other children and families with their own flavor of tragedy and the last thing they need is to feel bombarded.. Maya also needs rest.”

GoFundMe for Maya, teammate
A GoFundMe page for Maya and another for the family her teammate and her 13-year-old friend Ezekiel Schofield, who was killed in the shooting, have been set up for those who wish to donate. As of Monday afternoon, more than $420,000 has been raised for Maya.
Psychosis affirming care failed these children.