Ze God of Sadness trailing behind to meet his fate.

 "I know he & i are concieved from ourselves & each other. every night of the self-awareness journey, every thought we concieved, we have finished the race. time to die. everything we knew, we were able to understand it, to percieve it, into what we should, everything we knew, we know & use. an understanding of the everything.  the zombies will never cause us pain anymore. the humanity was a test. 

                      Time to die, time to be free, time to love.“
– Dylan Klebold

I am A gun.  A Wildey 45 semiautomatic.  I am god.
I kill people.  I was never made for hunting, just 
to kill humans.  When someone needs to die, I kill them.
There was this bald guy once.  He was gay & 
arrogant & superficial & had a
false sense of power.
 I blew off half of his head
with 1 shot. I am god. he died.

– Dylan Klebold, Creative Writing Class

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Q. Where did Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold fit in?

DEVON ADAMS: Dylan Klebold was one of my best friends. And when I hung out with him, there was just something that happened. I mean, whether they were wearing jeans and a T-shirt, or whether they were wearing their black trench coats, people would give them looks. Just like, “You don’t belong here, would you leave?”

Let’s block out last week when I say this – they hadn’t done anything physically wrong to people. I mean, they dressed different. So? They wore black. So what? It’s just, they were hated and so they felt they hated back. They hated back.

MEG HAINS: They’d call them freaks, weirdos, faggots. It was just stupid name calling, acting like little children. It’s like my cousins come home, they’re only 2 and 3, and they come home and start calling me names, calling each other names like butt-head and all these other things. They probably couldn’t handle it.

DEVON People called them fags. People thought they were gay. And that’s not right. I mean, even if they were – and which, they’re not – it’s not right to say that.

Columbine Students Talk of the Disaster and Life
April 30, 1999 – New York Times On the Web