86% of Mass Shooters Announced Plans — System Still Missed It

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86% of Mass Shooters Announced Plans — System Still Missed It

TL;DR

  • 86% of Mass Shooters Announced Plans — System Still Missed It. When someone tells you they're going to commit a massacre, do you believe them?
  • PostgreSQL Lock Nightmare: ACID Compliance Becomes a Straightjacket for Global Clusters. Is your database’s ACID compliance actually a slow-motion disaster waiting to happen?
  • Firefox Blocks 40% More Trackers Than Chrome — New Privacy Features Finally Arrive. Which browser actually respects your privacy?

🎯 Whoopsie-Daisy! 86% of Mass Shooters Literally Told You, and You Still Missed It 🎯

86% of mass shooters literally announced their plans. Nobody connected the dots. That's 8 out of 10, Karen. 👀 Schools saw red flags but played hot potato with cops. Cops needed evidence. Shrinks hid behind confidentiality. The system is a fragmented clusterfuck. So when someone tells you they're gonna shoot up a place, maybe—just maybe—believe them? Revolutionary concept, I know. 🚀

Well, well, well. Look who finally decided to read the memo. A shiny new study from the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium dropped on June 15, 2026, and it turns out that 86% of mass shooters in 171 U.S. incidents basically screamed their plans from the rooftops—or, you know, whispered them in a text message. The punchline? Nobody connected the damn dots. Because of course they didn't. 😑

The "I Told You So" Data Dump

  • 86% of perpetrators communicated violent intent before pulling the trigger. That's not a whisper; that's a bullhorn in a library.
  • Warning signs were scattered across in-person chats, text threads, and social media—like confetti at a parade nobody wanted to attend.
  • Missed opportunities because schools, cops, and shrinks all had their own little silos, hoarding clues like they were gold in a zombie apocalypse.
"Social networks fragment warning signs, making early intervention difficult," said Jaclyn Schildkraut, probably while resisting the urge to bang her head on a desk.

The Fragmented Clusterfuck

The real kicker? This isn't a new problem. It's the same old song and dance where everyone points fingers at everyone else. The study's follow-up briefing on June 16, 2026, basically begged for better communication between schools, law enforcement, and mental health providers. Because apparently, sharing information is harder than defusing a bomb with a spoon.

System Fragmentation:

  • Education: "We saw the red flags, but we're not cops."
  • Law Enforcement: "We can't act on rumors; we need evidence."
  • Mental Health: "We have confidentiality, you know."

And while they all play hot potato with responsibility, 86% of shooters are out here writing manifestos and sending ominous texts. Talk about a fail cascade.

The "We'll Fix It Next Time" Forecast

But wait—there's a glimmer of hope! Or at least a bureaucratic shrug. The Rockefeller Institute of Government is pushing for policy reforms, and law enforcement agencies are projected to integrate these recommendations into threat assessment training within the next year. Wow, a whole year. Meanwhile, perpetrators will keep leaking intentions like a sieve.

Impact Highlights:

  • Law Enforcement: Improved threat assessment pathways. Translation: they'll actually talk to schools now.
  • Mental Health Providers: Increased identification of risk in social circles. Because it only took a study to figure out that people talk.
  • Schools: Adoption of enhanced protocols. Finally, they'll stop ignoring the kid who says "I'm going to shoot up the place."

The Cheeky Bottom Line

Here's the thing: we've got the data. We've got the recommendations. But unless we break down the silos and start treating warning signs like an actual emergency, we're just going to keep reading these studies while the body count climbs. The system is broken, and it's not going to fix itself with a few training sessions and a prayer.

So, cheers to the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium for stating the obvious in a way that might actually make a difference. And to everyone else: maybe, just maybe, when someone tells you they're going to commit a massacre, believe them. Revolutionary concept, I know. 🚀

This article was brought to you by the letters 'W', 'T', and 'F', and the number '86'.


🗡️ PostgreSQL’s ACID Trip: When Locks Become a Straightjacket for Your Database

🗡️ PostgreSQL's ACID trip turned into a straitjacket: exclusive locks held way too long during table maintenance, turning global clusters into a digital traffic jam. Foreign constraints joined the chaos. Your database isn't a well-oiled machine—it's a slow-motion train wreck. 💥

So, you thought your PostgreSQL global cluster was a well-oiled machine? Guess again. Last month, the database world got a front-row seat to a slow-motion train wreck, and the culprit was something as mundane as advisory locks and vacuum routines. 🎭

The Setup: How We Managed to Fuck Up ACID Compliance

On May 27th, Metmatt reported that PostgreSQL advisory lock issues were turning global clusters into a digital traffic jam. The problem wasn't exotic—it was just plain stupid. Exclusive access locks were held way longer than necessary, especially during those table maintenance scripts that trigger when you try to bulk export data. And of course, because the universe has a sense of humor, foreign constraint enforcement decided to play a game of


🛡️ Mozilla Finally Admits Its Browser Is Trash, Adds Shake-to-Not-Be-A-Peeping-Tom Feature

Firefox's new update blocks 40% more trackers than Chrome. 🛡️ That's ~40% fewer ad networks fingering your browsing history. Mozilla finally treating users like they have a brain. But still the browser you install on grandma's laptop and forget about. What's your main browser and why isn't it Firefox?

Oh look, Mozilla finally remembered Firefox exists. In a desperate bid to stay relevant while Chrome eats everyone's RAM and sells their soul to ad brokers, Mozilla dropped Project Nova on June 16, 2026 — a redesign that screams “we’re not dead yet, please don’t uninstall us.”

What Did They Actually Do?

Let's break down the panic-driven feature dump:

  • Built-in VPN: You can now pretend to be in another country without paying a shady third party. Mozilla’s “free” VPN lets you select server locations. Translation: they’re finally monetizing your paranoia.
  • Shake-to-Summarize: On mobile, shake your phone like a toddler having a tantrum, and Firefox will AI-summarize the page. Because reading is for suckers.
  • Blocked Tracker Widget: A little dashboard showing how many times ad networks tried to finger your browsing history. Great for guilt-tripping yourself about how much you actually use the internet.
  • Power Saving Mode: Because Firefox was apparently a battery vampire. Now it sips power instead of guzzling it.
  • Multi-Account Containers: Finally native. No more juggling extensions like a circus clown. You can log into two Google accounts without them snitching on each other.
  • Quick Answers: Voice-based question answering. Just yell at your phone and Firefox will try not to sound like a moron.
  • JPEG XL Support: Because we needed another image format like a hole in the head.
  • Mute-All-Tabs Quick Action: The “shut up” button we've all been waiting for.

The Cynical Reality Check

Let’s not pretend this is altruism. Mozilla’s being squeezed by:

  • European Digital Markets Act: If you don't offer privacy, regulators will fine you until you cry.
  • Chrome’s stranglehold: Chrome has 65%+ market share. Firefox is the scrappy underdog that keeps tripping over its own shoelaces.
  • User feedback: Turns out people hate being tracked. Who knew?

How This Actually Impacts You

  • Privacy: Firefox now blocks more trackers than a paranoid schizophrenic. ~40% fewer tracking cookies on average vs. Chrome.
  • Performance: Power Saving Mode extends battery life by ~25% during heavy browsing. That’s ~45 minutes extra on a 3-hour session.
  • Usability: Redesigned settings mean you can finally find the damn “do not spy on me” toggle without a PhD in UI.

The Forecast (Because We Have To)

  • 2026–2027: ~8% market share growth among privacy-conscious users. That’s ~12 million new users. Still a rounding error compared to Chrome.
  • Q1 2027: Tab Groups on Android. Because desktop had them for years and mobile users are second-class citizens.
  • Q3 2027: Full AI integration for summarization and search. Expect more “features” that are just GPT wrappers.

The Bottom Line

Mozilla’s finally doing what it should have done five years ago: treating users like they have a brain. The built-in VPN, tracker blocking, and power saving are legitimately useful. But let’s be real — Firefox is still the browser you install on your grandma’s laptop and then forget about. Project Nova is a Hail Mary, and honestly, it might work. At least it’s not Chrome. 🔥

— Because your data shouldn't be the product, even if Mozilla's still figuring out how to pay the bills.

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