SciFiFisher wrote:I actually believe that these kids are going to grow up and change the laws about guns.
Geonuc wrote:For the first time, I have some faint hope that things will change, and it's because of the students.
Thumper wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:I actually believe that these kids are going to grow up and change the laws about guns.Geonuc wrote:For the first time, I have some faint hope that things will change, and it's because of the students.
Woa! If Swift comes in here and says something similar, then all four of us can be completely disappointed when nothing changes. [Depressing sarcasm mode]
Swift wrote:And if they don't win this battle in the near-term, they will likely be activists for life, and will impact the political process in the future.
“What they want is more restrictions on the law-abiding,” LaPierre said
Swift wrote:Trump had his "listening" meeting a couple of days ago and seemed to be supporting some reasonable gun restrictions.
But now he is really pushing arming teachers as a solution <eye roll>.
As someone on-line pointed out: virtually every US police officer killed in the line of duty was carrying a gun, yet they were killed. What is a teacher with a gun going to do against someone with an AR15.
Thumper wrote:There was an armed, deputized agent assigned to the school that day. He apparently knew the situation, and did not go into the area or in any way try to engage the shooter.
Thumper wrote:This is where we're at: 10 Year olds.
Thumper wrote:My elementary school was a fallout shelter. We had fallout drills where we crouched under our desks in preparation for if the Soviets ever dropped the big on on us...
Thumper wrote:This is where we're at: 10 Year olds.
Thumper wrote:I did not intend to disparage the officer involved. Though sadly, I know others are. My point was the was a trained, armed, law enforcement officer on the property as the tragedy unfolded. He could not/did not prevent innocents from dying. Neither did the trained, armed law enforcement officers at Fort Hood. So the the flippant, dangerous suggestion that we just give teachers guns and all will be safe is ridiculous and insulting. Teachers barely have enough time for lesson plans, teaching, and counseling. How are they expected to train in the safe use of firearms and practice frequently enough to make themselves remotely effective?
Fisher, thank you for your informed response.
geonuc wrote:I don't know, but I think if you're an armed sheriff deputy assigned to protect a school and a shooter is actively killing students, you have to go in and do what you can. Yes, that's pretty risky but why else is the deputy there? The job is to defend civilians.
The argument dovetails with my issue concerning cops who shoot people and then claim they 'feared' for their life. Even though the victim was unarmed or did not brandish a weapon. The job is to protect people, not shoot them, and that requires overcoming fear for your own safety and maybe getting shot in the process.
This deputy should have gone in as soon as he knew there was a shooter. Unless I learn something that excuses his inaction, he's a coward. His boss, the sheriff, seems to agree.
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