No, it’s not rhetoric, it’s not bullying. It’s reporting dangerous mental health issues and getting them into the NICS. Both Laughner & Cho telegraphed their instability loud & clear for anyone who was willing to listen. In fact, some did listen. Both Cho and Laughner were declared mentally ill, a danger to themselves and to others and ordered to seek treatment. And then . . .

There is a recognized problem with getting information like this into the NICS to keep firearms out of the hands of the mentally ill. Other disqualifying information makes it into the system rather quickly, felony violations and such. But, not mental health issues. The main reason for this is the direct pipeline between law enforcement and the NICS database. Even though Cho’s order to seek treatment was court ordered, that information never made it to the NICS.
Even Hinckley had been committed. Had the Brady Bill been in place when Hinckley purchased his .22 I would bet a paycheck he would have passed. And this, folks, is the cause we must get behind. At the state level we must lobby our politicos to get a reliable system in place to make certain that information about unstable people (as adjudicated by medical professionals) gets to the NICS system quickly. Otherwise, our 2a rights will continue to be eroded and good, sane folks will be denied their rights.
{Did everyone do all they could do to stop these two? No. The staff at Va Tech could very well have expelled Cho and held him until his parents showed up to take him back to NOVA. Could he have slunk back to Tech? Yes, but the distance may have discouraged him. Even with Laughner, I watched at least five interviews with other community college students in AZ who said they feared Laughner. You know, if five people reported his actions to AZ police, he might have been stopped.}