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Guns don't belong in school, period

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Published: Monday, August 25, 2008

Updated: Sunday, February 15, 2009

What if you walked into your first class this week, sat down, got out some paper to scribble notes on and then you noticed that the professor at the front of the room is strapped with a 9-millimeter handgun on their belt? What would be your first reaction? Some say this occurrence should take place in every classroom in the country. Those some are also from the great state of Texas - the biggest bunch of "freedom" loving, church-going, gun- toting folks you will ever meet.

The school district in Harrold, Texas will allow all staff members to carry concealed weapons starting this fall. The district's superintendent, David Thweatt, said that the schools are at a disadvantage in the case of an emergency because the nearest sheriff's office is 30 minutes away. He also says that the district is near a very busy highway which could increase the chance of being targeted in a school shooting.

The teachers and staff would have to take a crisis management training course and obtain a concealed weapons permit. Concealed weapons permits aren't exactly the be-all and end-all of gun responsibility.

Anyone who wants to carry a gun around can go to the nearest gun show and sit through a two-hour crash course on gun laws and safety tips. The state runs a background check and barring any prior felonies, restraining orders or mental illnesses, the gun nut receives their license to carry a deadly weapon with them at all times.

Thweatt told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, "When the federal government started making schools gun-free zones, that's when all of these shootings started. Why would you put it out there that a group of people can't defend themselves? That's like saying 'sic 'em' to a dog."

While it is true that Congress tried to ban weapons from schools with the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, the Supreme Court subsequently shot that down in the case of United States v. Lopez where they ruled that the act was an unconstitutional exercise of Congressional authority. Therefore it is left up to each institution (or school district in this case) to decide whether to allow legally carried guns into schools.

Students and faculty at the University of Utah are allowed to carry weapons on school premises, but that has been highly contested by anti-violence groups who say that guns should be limited to trained public officials like police officers. The University of Utah actually preferred to have neither students nor faculty carrying weapons at all and instituted a weapons ban, but the issue was brought before the Utah Supreme Court and the ban was struck down in 2006.

There is absolutely no reason for anyone other than police officers or security officials to have guns. Allowing the average citizen to carry a weapon into a school only increases the potential for tragedy. Miscommunication could lead to disaster. A teacher may interpret a student's body language to be threatening or vice versa and then chaos ensues.

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5 comments

Your name
Wed Feb 25 2009 14:39
Bewildered Knight,

I am guessing you were talking about this video:

nevermind, it appears this comment thing doesnt like links.

whenever somebody brings up the topic of concealed carry in any situation I try and bring up the seatbelt example.

A seatbelt serves as a tool to protect you in the event that you get in an accident. You hope and pray that you will never get into a serious accident but you where the seatbelt just in case.

It is the same thing with a firearm. I hope that I will never have to use one to defend myself but I will have it in the event that I need it. I would rather be caught in a situation with one than without one

this isnt to say that I am walking around looking for trouble. I am not a cop, that isnt my job. Having a permit doesnt give me free reign to go solve mysteries and fight crime. In any situation I would much rather run then have to use it, but if there is ever a situation that I cant run from, it is there.

stop stereotyping gun owners
Wed Feb 25 2009 00:10
guns kill less than 10,000 a year. compare that to heart disease and lung cancer which are over 3000000. cars kill more people a year than guns.
Bewildered Knight
Tue Feb 24 2009 22:15
"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." - Benjamin Franklin.

there are parts of the country where a police response can take up to 45 minutes to reach the victim. Should these people be forced to remain helpless while some person enters their property and attempts to steal from them or even worse kill them?

the funny thing about concealed carry is that it is just that, concealed. Living in florida you probably pass multiple people a day carrying a weapon if you venture off of campus. In order to receive this permit you must go through firearms safety training. They dont just allow anybody to carry a gun with them. there are background checks, fingerprints, and proficiency tests that you must go through before you are allowed to do this.

the whole wording in this article appalls me. "gun nut, freedom loving church going, deadly weapon."

A well kept and maintained gun cant kill a person on its own. I would pull up the video from american dad but that doesnt seem like it would support this argument very well.

I am from texas, I am a registered Liberal, I am also a supporter of the right to keep and bare arms. If you were to know me you would say that I was an average guy. I was raised catholic but am not a church loving gun toting lunatic.

The fact that you can stereotype gun owners into some backwoods redneck culture is absurd.

I realize I am jumping from one thought to another with this response but I am trying to cover all of my bases.

I would feel more comfortable knowing that my professor is carrying and has trained with a firearm. Lockdowns on campus only go so far if there is some sort of violent event on campus. What about those that are outside or trapped in a building. They are left there with no form of defense to wait for the police to arrive.

John - Fla.
Tue Feb 24 2009 20:58
I can't for the life of me, understand why anyone would want to take away other people's RIGHT to defend themself. The banning of firearms is an emotional, irrational reaction to an unfortunate situation that, in most cases, a firearm, in right hands could have stopped.
AN ARMED SOCIETY IS A POLITE SOCIETY!
Ray
Tue Feb 17 2009 15:26
If I can't carry my gun, may I please carry a police officer?






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