Breaking: 10 dead 25 injured after "woman wearing a dress" opens fire on school in BC, Canada

I'm torn between "mental disorder" and "pure evil."

How about a "purely-evil mental disorder"?
.

How many of the leftists in this board will even consider the possibility that they could be cured?

So my vote is for evil, or if we're looking at the worst leftists here in the board, a job is a job.

.
 
IMG_9729.webp
 

AI seems to confirm that.

Gemini said​

Based on current reports regarding the investigation into the Tumbler Ridge shooting (February 2026), this specific image began circulating widely on the internet on February 11, 2026.

The photo's timeline can be broken down into its original posting and its recent viral emergence:

Viral Emergence (Post-Incident)​

  • February 11, 2026: This is the date the photo became widely public. Following the shooting on February 10, investigative groups and internet users located the suspect's social media profiles (including accounts on platforms like TikTok and YouTube).
  • Source: The image was reportedly pulled from the suspect's own social media history, where she went by names such as Jesse Van Rootselaar or Jesse Strang.

Original Posting (Pre-Incident)​

  • While the exact date the suspect first uploaded this specific "Internet Princess" photo has not been definitively confirmed by authorities in a public timeline, digital footprints suggest her active transition and social media presence began roughly six years ago (around 2020).
  • Other photos of the suspect holding firearms—such as one where she is smiling on a couch with a rifle—have been traced back to as early as 2021 via family social media posts.
  • The clothing and aesthetic in this specific photo align with the suspect's more recent "Internet Princess" online persona, which was active in the year leading up to the 2026 incident.
Although there is a 2024 picture the shooter took of the family's gun safe. The SKS in the safe appears to be a different rifle..

1770947657892.webp
 
Last edited:
15th post
. Online sleuths quickly dug up the shooter’s past, online posts, behavioral history, and hobbies—some dark, some disturbing, some tragically predictable for a young person spiraling into violence. They discovered that he was into guns, liked to wear lipstick, and described himself online as MtF, trans slang for someone making the switch from male to female. (I could probably stop there.) They found old Facebook posts written by his mother—who was allegedly one of the victims, along with one of her three other children—asking a private parenting group for advice on dealing with a child who “is angry, mean, and territorial,” “hurts his siblings” and “covers things up and lies.” They unearthed evidence that the mom was also seeking help for his ADHD diagnosis and that the killer was in fact, taking psychiatric drugs. They pointed out, time and again, that Canada has some of the strictest gun laws on the planet, a detail that somehow didn’t stop a deranged lunatic from getting his hands on a weapon and opening deadly fire. Go figure.



The actual press, it seemed, was too concerned with identity etiquette to touch any of those piddling particulars. And even long after the gunperson had been positively identified as someone who was born with XY chromosomes, they still couldn’t do it. They couldn’t bring themselves to have the journalistic decency to make it clear that the suspect was a mentally ill male who at the very, most generous best could be considered a transgender woman.

 
Back
Top Bottom