<p>These 4 guys beat this poor kid with a bat, leaving the poor victim to drag himself to his apt where he collapsed, dying all alone in his own pool of blood.</p>
<p>Wish we could get some of the same medication that prolonged the death of that degenerate dirtball in Arizona, who was executed by the state, and force-feed these 4 pigs with a dose calibrated to cause maximum suffering.</p>
<p>Yep, we had a crew of very brave hoodlums here. Four knuckledraggers to beat up one scrawny graduate student. I hope they get some of their own medicine. But I really wish that the beating the stew out of the hoodlums could bring Ji back to life.</p>
And it’s important we know this because there are no US-born thugs and gang bangers in LA?
I know an illegal immigrant who works very hard and pays taxes and hasn’t killed anyone. Feel better?</p>
<p>"People shouldn’t attend this school unless they can afford armed bodyguards to drive them to and back from school. " from Francis Bacon - </p>
<p>Sadly, there are no Totally Safe colleges, or high schools for that matter. Everyone thought UCSB was idyllic. I think 8 people were killed in Isla Vista. How about the shootings at VA Tech, UT, and even the remote Northern Illinois? Then a girl was murdered in the labs at Yale, and a girl had her throat slashed in the UCLA chem labs. </p>
<p>What’s a parent to do? We can’t lock our kids in their bedrooms their entire lives. (that’s another kind of crime).
For Francis Bacon to say you shouldn’t go to USC is completely ignorant. Actually, students there are often safer, because they know to travel in groups, stay out of the bad areas, and always be aware.</p>
<p>Amanda Knox, a twice convicted murderer, attends the University of Washington, and I’m sure there are at least a few parents and students concerned about her presence. I’d be more concerned about her than a random assault that can happen at any urban college.</p>
<p>The argument is not whether USC is inherently dangerous (Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Schwartzenegger believe it’s safe enough for their daughter). The question is, what is USC doing to promote safety? Again, to some folks, the administration’s early public statement concerning the attack on Ji’s was a bit inadequate.</p>