Anonymous wrote:I think you'd be better off moving out of the US. Mass shootings happen in plenty of places that aren't public schools.
Anonymous wrote:What percentage of grade school students in this country are enrolled in public schools? Not sure if your point is that 95% is high or low without that context.
Anonymous wrote:~95% of K-12 students in the US attend public schools.
Anonymous wrote:There was just a private school shooting in DC a couple of months ago. Being private doesn't protect you
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As scary as this is, I am far more worried about cancer, car accidents and drugs and mental health.
Exactly. Illegal drug abuse is killing over 100,000 Americans a year. Many of them are children. Astounding how there isn’t a peep here about THOSE kids. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is PP. I mean not much more you can do if you’re not willing to enact gun control.
You start paying attention to the lack of effective mental health services for teen boys from fatherless homes.
Would you STFU about fatherless homes. No evidence it matters.
Name one teen killer who had a present, loving and respectable father at home.
The shooters from Columbine, the shooter of the Sunday school, Virginia Tech shooter. Want me to go on?
Zero evidence that either killer had a present and loving father at home. The mother who wrote a book is an obvious nut job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please also donate to gun control organizations, OP!
Banning most guns is the only way to reduce mass shooting incidents, as well as the majority of firearm homicides, which occur as accidents in the home or suicides. The data is incontrovertible on this. Every other wealthy nation has banned guns and as a result, do not have nearly the number of firearm homicides per capita that the US does.
So you should move to one of those places if you can’t accept our Constitutional rights shall not be infringed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you drive to school? Or spend any time on a road whatsoever?
Way riskier.
I'm sorry you're feeling anxious, op. Maybe getting active might help. For both gun safety and road safety, parents need to mobilize and push for change
You’re wrong.
Statistically, American children are more likely to die from gun violence than from car accidents.
If you include teenagers, yes. For children under 13, car wrecks are more deadly. And every death is tragic, but most of those teenage gun deaths are suicides or drug/gang related, not random school shootings.
It also highly varies based off racial group too.
https://www.thetrace.org/newsletter/the-growing-racial-disparity-among-youth-gun-deaths/
By 2019, Black youth had a gun mortality rate 4.3 times higher than white youth and a gun homicide rate more than 14 times higher. “There is no biologic plausibility for these disparities but rather they are a reflection of racist systems and policies that perpetuate inequities in violent injuries and death,” the authors wrote.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you drive to school? Or spend any time on a road whatsoever?
Way riskier.
I'm sorry you're feeling anxious, op. Maybe getting active might help. For both gun safety and road safety, parents need to mobilize and push for change
You’re wrong.
Statistically, American children are more likely to die from gun violence than from car accidents.
If you include teenagers, yes. For children under 13, car wrecks are more deadly. And every death is tragic, but most of those teenage gun deaths are suicides or drug/gang related, not random school shootings.