Another gunman, another elementary school

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

If the trained resource officers just ran away, what do they expect teachers to do?


I doubt he or she had much training. It is interesting how people think underpaid security officers are going to throw themselves in front of bullets.


Yet we waste money arming our schools like prisons instead of doing the obvious like doing licensing for guns the way cars are licensed. And holding gun manufacturers responsible by letting them be sued when they are criminally negligent. You can sue a car manufacturer but Congress gave gun manufacturers immunity from lawsuits. Talk about national priorities….l

What about fatherless homes?


+1. As a tweet I read today said:

Start with a boy. Take away his father. Give him a drug-addicted, unwed mother. Sit him in front of a computer all day. Feed him porn, tik-tok videos and other "content." Give him no guidance, no moral compass, no religious training. Start him on drugs for some condition. Close his school and isolate him. This is how you make a school shooter. Every single one of them.


You forgot about the part where he then went to the store and bought an automatic rifle designed to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible. This same boy exists in other countries, but he can't get the weapons...


Oh really? You think there is no gun violence in Asia, South America, Central America, the Middle East....? You don't get out much, do you?


Dipshit: America is "number one" in school shootings. U-S-A! U-S-A!


DP. Then GTFO of my country. Many countries shootings go unreported or their ass is covered by the leftist government/media

Gun violence in Central American countries is extremely common. In Honduras, the homicide rate is many times the global average. Because of heavily armed gangs in Honduras, school shootings “are so common, they are subsumed quickly into the country's news cycle and barely register outside its borders.”. As such, the true number of school shootings in Honduras is unknown, but believed to be high. Mexico has experienced 17 reported school shootings since 2004. All of these incidents have resulted in zero to two deaths each. In each of the three shootings that had two deaths, one was the perpetrator. South Africa has experienced five school shootings since 1994, resulting in eight deaths in total.

Excluding China, several Asian nations have experienced school shootings. These include one in Taiwan (1962), two in Israel (1974 and 2008), one in Yemen (1997), one in the Philippines (1999), one in Thailand (2003), one in Lebanon (2007), one in India (2007), one in Azerbaijan (2009), and one in Pakistan. The "Peshawar siege" in 2014 was a Taliban attack that killed 145 (plus the gunmen), making it the deadliest school shooting in Asia

School shootings in other countries include on in Argentina (2004), one in New Zealand (1923), one in Nigeria (2013), and one in Kenya in 2015. The shooting in Kenya was a terrorist attack that killed 147 people and injured another 79.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/school-shootings-by-country

OH and fyi many of the texan parents own guns and don't blame the guns for the deaths.



You do realize that all this list does is point out how low these numbers are relative to the US? These countries have had school shootings twenty years ago, and we’ve had one a day ago. Pathetic.
Anonymous
Gotta love the loon insisting that massacres of elementary kids in the US is perfectly normal based on terrorist violence by the Taliban.
Anonymous
DP. Then GTFO of my country.


It’s not “your” country. It’s our country.

And our country has a gun problem. Most Americans support common sense gun laws. We don’t want the violence of a third world country.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

If the trained resource officers just ran away, what do they expect teachers to do?


I doubt he or she had much training. It is interesting how people think underpaid security officers are going to throw themselves in front of bullets.


Yet we waste money arming our schools like prisons instead of doing the obvious like doing licensing for guns the way cars are licensed. And holding gun manufacturers responsible by letting them be sued when they are criminally negligent. You can sue a car manufacturer but Congress gave gun manufacturers immunity from lawsuits. Talk about national priorities….l

What about fatherless homes?


+1. As a tweet I read today said:

Start with a boy. Take away his father. Give him a drug-addicted, unwed mother. Sit him in front of a computer all day. Feed him porn, tik-tok videos and other "content." Give him no guidance, no moral compass, no religious training. Start him on drugs for some condition. Close his school and isolate him. This is how you make a school shooter. Every single one of them.


You forgot about the part where he then went to the store and bought an automatic rifle designed to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible. This same boy exists in other countries, but he can't get the weapons...


Oh really? You think there is no gun violence in Asia, South America, Central America, the Middle East....? You don't get out much, do you?


Dipshit: America is "number one" in school shootings. U-S-A! U-S-A!


DP. Then GTFO of my country. Many countries shootings go unreported or their ass is covered by the leftist government/media

Gun violence in Central American countries is extremely common. In Honduras, the homicide rate is many times the global average. Because of heavily armed gangs in Honduras, school shootings “are so common, they are subsumed quickly into the country's news cycle and barely register outside its borders.”. As such, the true number of school shootings in Honduras is unknown, but believed to be high. Mexico has experienced 17 reported school shootings since 2004. All of these incidents have resulted in zero to two deaths each. In each of the three shootings that had two deaths, one was the perpetrator. South Africa has experienced five school shootings since 1994, resulting in eight deaths in total.

Excluding China, several Asian nations have experienced school shootings. These include one in Taiwan (1962), two in Israel (1974 and 2008), one in Yemen (1997), one in the Philippines (1999), one in Thailand (2003), one in Lebanon (2007), one in India (2007), one in Azerbaijan (2009), and one in Pakistan. The "Peshawar siege" in 2014 was a Taliban attack that killed 145 (plus the gunmen), making it the deadliest school shooting in Asia

School shootings in other countries include on in Argentina (2004), one in New Zealand (1923), one in Nigeria (2013), and one in Kenya in 2015. The shooting in Kenya was a terrorist attack that killed 147 people and injured another 79.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/school-shootings-by-country

OH and fyi many of the texan parents own guns and don't blame the guns for the deaths.



So there was ONE school shooting in Argentina 8 years ago, ONE in New Zealand 100 years ago, ONE in Nigeria 9 years ago, and ONE in Kenya 7 years ago. We have had 27 just this year and 119 since 2018 in the U.S. Since 1970 there have been 2,032 school shootings in the U.S.A. Then many of the other countries you are saying there are mass shooting, are in are third world countries. So what you have shown is that we are on par with the third world. Is that the type of place you are happy living in? The countries that I am sure you may have a disdain for?

Please tell me how you consider countries having ONE school shooting YEARS ago to this country? Also, please don’t worry, I have been considering how to leave here for a more forward thinking society for quite some time. Unfortunately it is not just as easy as GTFO. I really wish it was though.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

If the trained resource officers just ran away, what do they expect teachers to do?


I doubt he or she had much training. It is interesting how people think underpaid security officers are going to throw themselves in front of bullets.


Yet we waste money arming our schools like prisons instead of doing the obvious like doing licensing for guns the way cars are licensed. And holding gun manufacturers responsible by letting them be sued when they are criminally negligent. You can sue a car manufacturer but Congress gave gun manufacturers immunity from lawsuits. Talk about national priorities….l

What about fatherless homes?


+1. As a tweet I read today said:

Start with a boy. Take away his father. Give him a drug-addicted, unwed mother. Sit him in front of a computer all day. Feed him porn, tik-tok videos and other "content." Give him no guidance, no moral compass, no religious training. Start him on drugs for some condition. Close his school and isolate him. This is how you make a school shooter. Every single one of them.


You forgot about the part where he then went to the store and bought an automatic rifle designed to kill as many people as possible as quickly as possible. This same boy exists in other countries, but he can't get the weapons...


Oh really? You think there is no gun violence in Asia, South America, Central America, the Middle East....? You don't get out much, do you?


Dipshit: America is "number one" in school shootings. U-S-A! U-S-A!


DP. Then GTFO of my country. Many countries shootings go unreported or their ass is covered by the leftist government/media

Gun violence in Central American countries is extremely common. In Honduras, the homicide rate is many times the global average. Because of heavily armed gangs in Honduras, school shootings “are so common, they are subsumed quickly into the country's news cycle and barely register outside its borders.”. As such, the true number of school shootings in Honduras is unknown, but believed to be high. Mexico has experienced 17 reported school shootings since 2004. All of these incidents have resulted in zero to two deaths each. In each of the three shootings that had two deaths, one was the perpetrator. South Africa has experienced five school shootings since 1994, resulting in eight deaths in total.

Excluding China, several Asian nations have experienced school shootings. These include one in Taiwan (1962), two in Israel (1974 and 2008), one in Yemen (1997), one in the Philippines (1999), one in Thailand (2003), one in Lebanon (2007), one in India (2007), one in Azerbaijan (2009), and one in Pakistan. The "Peshawar siege" in 2014 was a Taliban attack that killed 145 (plus the gunmen), making it the deadliest school shooting in Asia

School shootings in other countries include on in Argentina (2004), one in New Zealand (1923), one in Nigeria (2013), and one in Kenya in 2015. The shooting in Kenya was a terrorist attack that killed 147 people and injured another 79.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/school-shootings-by-country

OH and fyi many of the texan parents own guns and don't blame the guns for the deaths.



You do realize that all this list does is point out how low these numbers are relative to the US? These countries have had school shootings twenty years ago, and we’ve had one a day ago. Pathetic.


How about you GTFO my country, gun nut. 20 kids and adults were massacred a couple of days ago and that’s just a week after 15 people gunned down in the supermarket, and you’re talking about 1 shooting here and another there 15+ years ago in other countries.
Anonymous


Anonymous
^ Sorry meant to post to the psycho who with the long rant about school shootings overseas.
Anonymous
The obsession with guns in this country is a mental illness. You're not living on the land and hunting food you eat - you're weaponizing yourself in a fatal cycle of human killing.

It's astounding how people are attached to their weapons like it's a blankie.
Anonymous
It's weird how conservatives simultaneously don't trust teachers to select books for their curriculum or talk about gender identity or racism but think they should all have guns
Anonymous
How was Ramos able to enter the school? Were the doors unlocked, and anybody could just walk in holding a machine gun?
Anonymous
The parents who arrived on scenes were breaking the windows and pulling kids out that way. Why didn’t the SRO’s help them instead of twiddling their thumbs?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:How was Ramos able to enter the school? Were the doors unlocked, and anybody could just walk in holding a machine gun?


How did he gets machined gun?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
DP. Then GTFO of my country.


It’s not “your” country. It’s our country.

And our country has a gun problem. Most Americans support common sense gun laws. We don’t want the violence of a third world country.
Wake up. We already have the violence of a 3rd world country.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How was Ramos able to enter the school? Were the doors unlocked, and anybody could just walk in holding a machine gun?


How did he gets machined gun?


I heard he bought the gun at a store. But how did he enter the school was the question I asked - was it not locked? Our public is locked after school starts.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How was Ramos able to enter the school? Were the doors unlocked, and anybody could just walk in holding a machine gun?


How did he gets machined gun?


I heard he bought the gun at a store. But how did he enter the school was the question I asked - was it not locked? Our public is locked after school starts.


Do you think a locked door is stopping a guy with a machine gun? Jfc.
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