I agree, the reporter may be looking for a new job.... maybe at Fox News.
I asked in another thread how the shooter could have afforded all the ammo and weapons. Someone had said it was probably charged to a credit card because he wasn't gonna pay it off any way.
After talking to my neighbor, I can see how the shooter might easily have afforded everything he had bought.
This guy was studying for a PHD in Neuro-medicine. Apparently he already had a 6 yr masters degree. So, if he had been doing any paid residency work at the hospital near where he lived, he could have been making some good money at one point.
My neighbor's kid just became a anesthesiologist which takes 6 yrs of school.... a lot lower on the pole than a neuro surgeon. While going to school he was working at 2 different hospitals located on oposite sides of a very large city.. he was making enough to buy [not rent] two- 2 bedroom condos. One near each hospital he worked at so that he wouldn't have to drive long distances after getting off work after long shifts at either hospital. Now that he is fully licensed, he has sold those 2 condos and just started a new job at a hospital in Texas.. which will pay approx. $300,000 a yr to start. So the shooter could possibly have made enough money to pay for as much ammo & weapons as he wanted if he had been doing any paid residency work at the hospital. It will be interesting to find out just where he was getting his money. He had money for his apartment, utilities, phone, car / gas / insurance / groceries, furniture, and everything else.. I don't think it was all being charged to credit cards and student loan money.
I think you're confused. This "shooter" isn't a medical doctor nor was studying to be one so therefore he can't or could have been doing any "paid residency work". And second, to become anesthesiologist it takes 4 years college, 4 years med school and then a 4 year residency. That's 12 years and not 6. PHD students don't make squat.
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