time that the shooting may have taken place, may have witnessed the violence, certainly may have witnessed the aftermath. all of that really leaping out at me, just the horror of this and the unprecedented historic nature of this shooting, that really jumped out at me. to the professor, james, the horror of this first of all the mix of victims, asian and hispanics. these are farm workers. they have had tremendous pressure. they have been out of work because of the flooding. they can t work in the fields. we don t know what caused it. they are pointing to a workplace related incident. that s right. in our research, you find that workplace shootings are the most common type of mass shooting. it s usually some sort of stressor or grievance associated with the workplace, which is underlying that. this is a common theme that we have seen in the history of mass shootings. going back decades.
of psychological issue, in addition to a stressor, we see these kind of attacks, and they get directed not only against an initially-spended intended target but across a wide geography. and one other quick point, the attack last decade, a person going against his ex-wife killed everyone in the orbit he could get. so we see that with people undergoing psychological distress or sociopaths shall,, experiencing anger and a scatter shot approach and much easier now with the firearms that are available, in these states like california, that i m in, which have restricted gun laws, we have a much lower homicide rate than what we see in states that don t, but the guns come across the border often times, as we
as in dobbs, response to political pressures and decades of fighting between grassroots groups and political parties. sometimes, our rights have nothing to do with the federal courts. they are also the results of state or federal legislations, state constitutional rulings, and ballot initiative decisions passed by ordinary voters. given all that context, how are things shaken up for you so far as you look at this last year? i think it s been a stressor for democracy. we see what polls have already suggested, which is that voters in most states, in, fact all the states who have had the opportunity to weigh in support some form of abortion rights. i ve been heartened by the fact that so far, at least, democracy seems to be working in that way. i think often, you have to look at abortion rights votes to see if people are actually being allowed access to the vote, whether if that s because of gerrymandering restrictions on the vote. when voters have an opportunity to weigh in, we see and
aware of the stressor that energy costs means for working families. he got to work with release of oil from the strategic reserves, continues to work with our allies, with the russian price cap. keeping martha: will he be replacing the strategic petroleum reserves at that price? probably that kind he cited a price of around $70 a barrel for replacement. that has been the price of wti oil recently. that replacement probably would occur at some point. by the way, that means every barrel, which we sold at about $96 a barrel, we buy at 70 to replenish. that s a great break for the american taxpayer. martha: what about one of the big debates going on in congress is coming from conservatives that want to see spending cuts. we ve seen the absolute opposite. you know a lot of people are very upset about this 1.7
The US Department of Justice has seized 48 Internet domains and charged six suspects for their involvement in running Booter or Stresser platforms that allow anyone to easily conduct distributed denial of service attacks.