No one can steal what you never had.
Klebold and Harris were stunted adolescents who never learned what it means to be a man. Cho was an even more pathetic case, because he was older and had longer to figure it out. Instead of turning his eye on himself, asking how he could get along better with everyone else, he blamed everyone else.
His adolescent angst -- if you want to talk about an unoriginal problems, that's number one by a wide margin -- turned into murderous rage, because he never considered that folks didn't like him because of something about him. Another kid who radiates to much hatred, of everyone including himself, that he sees it reflected back at him and thinks the world hates him.
The problem isn't that someone took Cho's stones; the problem is that he never found them. And that isn't the fault of feminists, or the educational establishment, or whatever boogeyman you'd like to choose. The fault is all his own.
Since you believe obviously to have found your stones, then do you have the ability to enlighten us all on how you managed to avoid the fate of Cho?
I say that men in general have been immasculated in both popular culture and in the education process, socialization.
I believe that incidents like the Cho debacle could have been prevented by someone who knows what is going on, the immasculation process.
I said the same thing I am saying now right after Columbine. And if we don't reach an understanding of the dynamic, then it will happen again.
Whussy Pipping boys and young men has a cost, and we are paying it.
Allowing concealed carry on the VT campus would indeed go a long way to counter the immasculation of men in society, and placing them in the protector role, their natural habitat.