JL said:
J.B.Katz said:
boognish_bear said:
Ghostrider said:
J.B.Katz said:
SIC EM 94 said:
J.B.Katz said:
cowboycwr said:
1. Armed police officers works for districts that can afford an officer per school. It doesn't work for smaller schools.
And as pointed out it doesn't always help if the officer does nothing like the Florida shooting.
2. Then there is the issue that they can't be everywhere at once and a shooter can still get in to the school.
3. Someone mentioned the locked doors. This is huge. There should be one entrance used to the school. Which is a problem at older schools that have multiple buildings like detached gyms, locker rooms, band halls, etc.
4. All schools need the locked outer door and an interior vestibule door that is locked.
5. Then go a step further and the glass on both doors and windows next to them need to be bullet resistant. I know of plenty of schools that have the two door system but both are just regular safety glass. Hard to break with a rock, chair, etc. but a gun would be able to shoot it out.
6. Panic button at the front desk.
7. Front desk person armed/ safe with locked gun. Or at minimum something like a can of bear spray.
8. Armed staff
9. Lots of drills. Currently in Texas schools have to do two lock down/active shooter drills a year. It should be more. With practice on what to do.
10. All classrooms should have devices used to jam the doors shut. There are a lot of options for any type of door.
All of these don't need to be done but at least two or 3 would help a lot.
Yeah, I really want my grandkids to spent their school hours doing lots of active shooter drills and investing time and energy in all of the rest of this stuff instead of actually learning how to read, right and do arithemetic so Cowboy can open carry.
What the Hell does open carry have to do with school shootings? You are so consumed by your dream of banning guns, that you make the most irrelevant posts over and over. Can you please try and think like an adult?
I don't want to ban guns.
I just want to restrict who can buy them so troubled 18-year-old kids can't buy assault weapons the week after they turn 18 and kill 19 kids and 2 teachers in an elementary school. Does that sound like a reasonble goal to you?
. What is a troubled kid? What troubling thing in his life would have prevented him from getting a gun? Knowing that he was bullied? Knowing he failed 12th grade? Knowing he wore eyeliner? Serious questions.
Seems like most….if not all…including this one….had posted pics online of themselves with their stockpile of weapons. That seems to be a common red flag.
I'm not sure exactly what schools or police have an authority to do or investigate when online pics like that surface….but that seems to be a definite commonality with these shooters.
How about not selling people guns until they're old enough to legally drink alcohol?
Our society long ago concluded it was unwise to let teens drink adult beverages until they reached the minimum age of adulthood. Owning a gun is an adult responsibility.
My issue isn't with guns. They don't shoot themselves.
It's with the gun lobby's/politicians' complete failure to require people to exercise minimal care and responsibility in the sale of firearms and ammunition.
To get the guns this kid got, he should have been required to undergo gun safety training and get a license, like a hunting license. At his own expense. Tired of seeing "financial burden" arguments applied to gun safety training and licensing that conservatives don't accept when applied to the cost of healthcare and other basic necessities of life.
And, yes, if you want to own and use an assault weapon, you should be in a national database as the purchaser/owner of an assault weapon. There should be a clear public record of who has purchased assault weapons and ammo. The good guys who own these weapons proudly should have no problem with doing that on the record. And if somebody's assembling an arsenal to do a mass shooting, there should be ways to detect those purchases and investigate.
I'm really tired of an irresponsible level of "freedom" related to one specific product--guns--being valued far more than the lives and safety of children and other mass shooting victims.
It's also telling that there's a huge outcry about the 19 kids in Uvalde, but not so much of one about the racist shooter who carried out a carefully planned attack, right down to the body armor that made the "good guy with a gun" who was on the premises an inadequate defense against his attack, killing people for no other reason than because they lived in a black neighborhood and were shopping at their neighborhood grocery store.
From reading this, I can only assume you have very little knowledge of firearms and "freedom."
Then educate me.
Why should we have fewer restrictions on the purchase, ownership and use of lethal firearms and than we do on driving cars and drinking alcohol?
There are many areas of life in which we don't have unrestricted freedom. Conservatives obviously don't support unlimited freedom in many areas of life. Many are very eager to restrict the freedom of women and girls to make personal decisions for themselves, even in cases of rape or incest, the freedom of gay people to marry same-sex partners (some even favor laws outlawing certain sex acts most people do behind closed doors where the government should, IMO, never intrude), and the freedom of parents in the state of Texas to work with their children's doctors to make decisions about medical treatment without fear of having Child Protective Services show up.
So why should freedoms relating to the purchase of all types of guns and ammo be unrestricted when so many other freedoms are simultaneously at risk of being severely restricted or eliminated altogether?
If making sure deranged, angry teens can't easily arm up and kill more than 20 kids and teachers in an elementary school isn't pro-life, then what is?
It just strikes me as really ironic that conservatives claim to be pro-life and pro-child when they have done everything possible to make our country a very unfriendly place to have and raise children:
-high cost of child care,
-no paid parental leave for many workers (especially low-income workers who need it most),
-no secure access to medical care for many working-age people,
-few or no workplace accommodations for pregnant women,
-schools that aren't safe where kids are forced to do active shooter drills because the right of anybody over 18 to own and carry lethal assault weapons is valued much higher politically than the lives of little children,
-schools where the school boards are banning books and trying to force a sanitized version of American history into the curriculum,
-schools where one religion is clearly favored and endorsed over all others (a sore point with me--my high school in the 1960s couldn't even have a prom because our principal was Church of Christ and wouldn't permit a dance and my grade school had a Christmas pageant that my Jewish classmate participated in because his parents thought that might keep him from being bullied. I thought we'd moved beyond that pettiness, but we clearly haven't, despite living in a country founded on the principles of no state religion and separation of church and state.
And the strategy to cope with a declining birth rate? Forced birth, even in cases or rape or incest, reducing a woman to a "vessel" + restrictions on contraception. That dismissive attitude toward woman as people whose personal agency and freedom also matters is what made it to easy for Paige Patterson and his ilk to flourish in the SBC for so many years.
What's sad is, the gun lobby and its Republican enablers will just wait this out. As they have every other mass shooting. If Sandy Hook and Parkland, where most of the victims were white middle-class kids, didn't spark change, a small-town school where most victims are Hispanic certainly won't. Which is a sick commentary on a supposedly Christian nation where "in Christ there is no east or west, in him no north or south, but one great fellowship of love..."
Love is not what those kids felt when they were shot to death in Uvalde. Shame on us as a nation.