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Hello Rappler reader,
Filipino teens committing acts of violence in their schools. This is the horrifying reality we are now confronting after the killing of three students at the hands of their own schoolmates in Tacloban City.
As a parent, I read with disbelief and fear about how a 14-year-old and 15-year-old met for an hour in a school lavatory, then emerged with murder on their minds and a cop’s 9mm Glock pistol in their hands.
I watched a shaky video, sourced by one of our stringers, of teachers and students screaming and crying in fear as gunshots rang out, extinguishing the lives of their schoolmates in another room.
This is far from an isolated incident, as our tech reporter Gelo Gonzales writes in this piece. The first recorded incident took place in Marikina last October, then months later in Batangas, then in the same month, police foiled a school shooting being planned by 7 kids in Calabarzon.
But what struck me most about this pattern is its connection to a horrific extremist movement: nihilistic violent extremism, or NVE.
Gelo writes that NVE is a loose online subculture that celebrates violence as an end in itself, and as a way of gaining acceptance into a community of like-minded people.
NVE groomers target young people experiencing social isolation or mental health struggles.
In short, NVE communities promise social acceptance to vulnerable, lonely kids for committing acts of violence – the more horrendous, the greater their status in the group.
If this is not a perversion of community, I don’t know what is.
What can we do to stop NVE from twisting our young people? In our Ask Me Anything session last month with the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordination Center and the Council for the Welfare of Children, what I heard was: it takes community.
It takes a village to protect a village. Let’s start now.
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