Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guns aren’t going anywhere, especially anytime soon. They are here to stay in our lifetime. Ban or not- they will be available and in circulation for a long time.
We need police with courage. We need police that will put their safety aside and rush in with everything they’ve got- when kids are being mass murdered. I wouldn’t expect this of police in very circumstance. But a school shooting, you
GO IN and stop him or die trying. We need police capable of this
I remember a time when the idea that people wouldn’t smoke cigarettes everywhere was inconceivable.
I hate guns and I can also be realistic about the power of the 2nd amendment.
No amendment about tobacco.
NP
Anonymous wrote:
In every election, police unions endorse Republican candidates who demand unlimited, widespread proliferation of AR-15s. Yet, when children’s lives are in danger from a psychopath with an AR-15, police apparently won’t rush in to save them because it would be a suicide mission. Here’s a thought: Maybe police unions should *stop endorsing* the Republican candidates who are flooding the community with AR-15s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guns aren’t going anywhere, especially anytime soon. They are here to stay in our lifetime. Ban or not- they will be available and in circulation for a long time.
We need police with courage. We need police that will put their safety aside and rush in with everything they’ve got- when kids are being mass murdered. I wouldn’t expect this of police in very circumstance. But a school shooting, you
GO IN and stop him or die trying. We need police capable of this
Yep
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guns aren’t going anywhere, especially anytime soon. They are here to stay in our lifetime. Ban or not- they will be available and in circulation for a long time.
We need police with courage. We need police that will put their safety aside and rush in with everything they’ve got- when kids are being mass murdered. I wouldn’t expect this of police in very circumstance. But a school shooting, you
GO IN and stop him or die trying. We need police capable of this
I remember a time when the idea that people wouldn’t smoke cigarettes everywhere was inconceivable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids should not go to school in a prison. That’s completely f**ked up. Who are you monsters?!
Ban guns! It’s so easy to fix.
+1
As someone who taught in a school that was fashioned like a prison I 100% agree. That does something to a child’s psyche that I would not want children to experience. Stop putting all of our burdens on our most vulnerable population. Adults don’t seem to want to make change or sacrifice anything for children.
Make those changes, but they take time. But in the meantime? Save the children. The door, according to MSN who referenced video, was left propped open. Teacher went out, got his/her phone to call authorities after the shooter crashed his truck and shot at funeral home personnel, went back in and sadly didn't shut the door. Not his/her fault, just an unfortunate circumstance.
Just think if he didn’t have a gun, we wouldn’t be having this discussion and burying a bunch of children.
If the teacher had a weapon in his/her car, got that instead of just a cell phone, shut the door and stood on the inside, or if there wa s an armed resource officer inside, it could have been different too.
We can both play the wish it was game. But that won't change a thing tomorrow. Again, even if there was a massive ban and buyback program, that takes time. There are things that can be changed today to protect kids tomorrow
The answer is always more guns, isn’t it?! When do we have enough guns? You aren’t much better than the shooter. You enable people like him.
It's worked in the past. It's not always the answer but I guess until you get ALL the guns, your odds are better if there is a good guy with one as well.
The “good guy” line was literally made up by the NRA after Sandy Hook. There were 19 good guys there and they were all afraid of the arsenal that the people they voted for made available to the bad guy.
Here’s the training manual for school shootings:
https://www.tcole.texas.gov/sites/default/files/CourseCMU/Active%20Shooter%20-%20SBLE%202195%20course%20Final%201-30-20.docx
![]()
So take all the guns away from honest, law abiding citizens and see if the violence stops.
Anonymous wrote:Guns aren’t going anywhere, especially anytime soon. They are here to stay in our lifetime. Ban or not- they will be available and in circulation for a long time.
We need police with courage. We need police that will put their safety aside and rush in with everything they’ve got- when kids are being mass murdered. I wouldn’t expect this of police in very circumstance. But a school shooting, you
GO IN and stop him or die trying. We need police capable of this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids should not go to school in a prison. That’s completely f**ked up. Who are you monsters?!
Ban guns! It’s so easy to fix.
+1
As someone who taught in a school that was fashioned like a prison I 100% agree. That does something to a child’s psyche that I would not want children to experience. Stop putting all of our burdens on our most vulnerable population. Adults don’t seem to want to make change or sacrifice anything for children.
Make those changes, but they take time. But in the meantime? Save the children. The door, according to MSN who referenced video, was left propped open. Teacher went out, got his/her phone to call authorities after the shooter crashed his truck and shot at funeral home personnel, went back in and sadly didn't shut the door. Not his/her fault, just an unfortunate circumstance.
Just think if he didn’t have a gun, we wouldn’t be having this discussion and burying a bunch of children.
If the teacher had a weapon in his/her car, got that instead of just a cell phone, shut the door and stood on the inside, or if there wa s an armed resource officer inside, it could have been different too.
We can both play the wish it was game. But that won't change a thing tomorrow. Again, even if there was a massive ban and buyback program, that takes time. There are things that can be changed today to protect kids tomorrow
The answer is always more guns, isn’t it?! When do we have enough guns? You aren’t much better than the shooter. You enable people like him.
It's worked in the past. It's not always the answer but I guess until you get ALL the guns, your odds are better if there is a good guy with one as well.
The “good guy” line was literally made up by the NRA after Sandy Hook. There were 19 good guys there and they were all afraid of the arsenal that the people they voted for made available to the bad guy.
Here’s the training manual for school shootings:
https://www.tcole.texas.gov/sites/default/files/CourseCMU/Active%20Shooter%20-%20SBLE%202195%20course%20Final%201-30-20.docx
![]()
So take all the guns away from honest, law abiding citizens and see if the violence stops.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids should not go to school in a prison. That’s completely f**ked up. Who are you monsters?!
Ban guns! It’s so easy to fix.
+1
As someone who taught in a school that was fashioned like a prison I 100% agree. That does something to a child’s psyche that I would not want children to experience. Stop putting all of our burdens on our most vulnerable population. Adults don’t seem to want to make change or sacrifice anything for children.
Make those changes, but they take time. But in the meantime? Save the children. The door, according to MSN who referenced video, was left propped open. Teacher went out, got his/her phone to call authorities after the shooter crashed his truck and shot at funeral home personnel, went back in and sadly didn't shut the door. Not his/her fault, just an unfortunate circumstance.
Just think if he didn’t have a gun, we wouldn’t be having this discussion and burying a bunch of children.
If the teacher had a weapon in his/her car, got that instead of just a cell phone, shut the door and stood on the inside, or if there wa s an armed resource officer inside, it could have been different too.
We can both play the wish it was game. But that won't change a thing tomorrow. Again, even if there was a massive ban and buyback program, that takes time. There are things that can be changed today to protect kids tomorrow
The answer is always more guns, isn’t it?! When do we have enough guns? You aren’t much better than the shooter. You enable people like him.
It's worked in the past. It's not always the answer but I guess until you get ALL the guns, your odds are better if there is a good guy with one as well.
The “good guy” line was literally made up by the NRA after Sandy Hook. There were 19 good guys there and they were all afraid of the arsenal that the people they voted for made available to the bad guy.
Here’s the training manual for school shootings:
https://www.tcole.texas.gov/sites/default/files/CourseCMU/Active%20Shooter%20-%20SBLE%202195%20course%20Final%201-30-20.docx
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Guns aren’t going anywhere, especially anytime soon. They are here to stay in our lifetime. Ban or not- they will be available and in circulation for a long time.
We need police with courage. We need police that will put their safety aside and rush in with everything they’ve got- when kids are being mass murdered. I wouldn’t expect this of police in very circumstance. But a school shooting, you
GO IN and stop him or die trying. We need police capable of this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids should not go to school in a prison. That’s completely f**ked up. Who are you monsters?!
Ban guns! It’s so easy to fix.
+1
As someone who taught in a school that was fashioned like a prison I 100% agree. That does something to a child’s psyche that I would not want children to experience. Stop putting all of our burdens on our most vulnerable population. Adults don’t seem to want to make change or sacrifice anything for children.
Make those changes, but they take time. But in the meantime? Save the children. The door, according to MSN who referenced video, was left propped open. Teacher went out, got his/her phone to call authorities after the shooter crashed his truck and shot at funeral home personnel, went back in and sadly didn't shut the door. Not his/her fault, just an unfortunate circumstance.
Just think if he didn’t have a gun, we wouldn’t be having this discussion and burying a bunch of children.
If the teacher had a weapon in his/her car, got that instead of just a cell phone, shut the door and stood on the inside, or if there wa s an armed resource officer inside, it could have been different too.
We can both play the wish it was game. But that won't change a thing tomorrow. Again, even if there was a massive ban and buyback program, that takes time. There are things that can be changed today to protect kids tomorrow
The answer is always more guns, isn’t it?! When do we have enough guns? You aren’t much better than the shooter. You enable people like him.
It's worked in the past. It's not always the answer but I guess until you get ALL the guns, your odds are better if there is a good guy with one as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids should not go to school in a prison. That’s completely f**ked up. Who are you monsters?!
Ban guns! It’s so easy to fix.
+1
As someone who taught in a school that was fashioned like a prison I 100% agree. That does something to a child’s psyche that I would not want children to experience. Stop putting all of our burdens on our most vulnerable population. Adults don’t seem to want to make change or sacrifice anything for children.
Make those changes, but they take time. But in the meantime? Save the children. The door, according to MSN who referenced video, was left propped open. Teacher went out, got his/her phone to call authorities after the shooter crashed his truck and shot at funeral home personnel, went back in and sadly didn't shut the door. Not his/her fault, just an unfortunate circumstance.
Just think if he didn’t have a gun, we wouldn’t be having this discussion and burying a bunch of children.
If the teacher had a weapon in his/her car, got that instead of just a cell phone, shut the door and stood on the inside, or if there wa s an armed resource officer inside, it could have been different too.
We can both play the wish it was game. But that won't change a thing tomorrow. Again, even if there was a massive ban and buyback program, that takes time. There are things that can be changed today to protect kids tomorrow
How do you feel about "proper perimeter fences" that are "intended to deter"? Big fan?
I think anything you do to slow down someone is helpful. Ted Bundy got Kimberly Leach on school grounds. He would have had a hard time climbing a locked fence with a child in tow.
The gunman climbed an 8' fence to get in.
The police had a lot of time to act. They chose not to.
Anonymous wrote: