L'absent
À ma manière 🪦
- Aug 18, 2024
- 1,043
Official statistics tell us that about 1 in 10 people survive a gunshot wound to the head, often with permanent damage. But are we sure this is true?
Think about it: we have dozens, if not hundreds, of documented videos of people shooting themselves in the head, often in public or live contexts. In all these cases, however, the outcome is always the same: instant death.
If the statistic were correct, we should see at least one survivor for every 10 people who shoot themselves in the head in public. So why doesn't this happen? The gun doesn't magically become more lethal just because it's in front of a camera, yet survival seems nonexistent in these documented contexts.
Where are the survivors with permanent disabilities? Why aren't there videos showing their existence? The complete absence of such visual evidence completely contradicts the official data.
Are we sure the numbers aren't "adjusted" somehow? Like St. Thomas, we believe only what we see with our own eyes. Without visual evidence of survivors, can we really trust the statistics?
What do you think? Is this just a coincidence, or is there something more behind this discrepancy?
Think about it: we have dozens, if not hundreds, of documented videos of people shooting themselves in the head, often in public or live contexts. In all these cases, however, the outcome is always the same: instant death.
If the statistic were correct, we should see at least one survivor for every 10 people who shoot themselves in the head in public. So why doesn't this happen? The gun doesn't magically become more lethal just because it's in front of a camera, yet survival seems nonexistent in these documented contexts.
Where are the survivors with permanent disabilities? Why aren't there videos showing their existence? The complete absence of such visual evidence completely contradicts the official data.
Are we sure the numbers aren't "adjusted" somehow? Like St. Thomas, we believe only what we see with our own eyes. Without visual evidence of survivors, can we really trust the statistics?
What do you think? Is this just a coincidence, or is there something more behind this discrepancy?