Til Valhall said:
If I was a law enforcement officer about to enter a school with an active shooter, I would prefer the teachers and staff to be unarmed.
And therefore more dead kids and grieving families?
Usually, it's all over by the time that police enter, and it could all be over a lot more quickly if some teachers are armed and in the right place.
See the links that I posted yesterday evening. Many law enforcement agencies are so much in favour of this that they are providing training to any teacher who wants it, and there are plenty of those. Training usually deals with how to safely hand over to police once they are actually on scene.
Til Valhall said:
You cannot predict what average, poorly trained people will do with firearms in panic situations.
Who says that they are poorly trained? Many police and military personnel have little interest in firearms and shooting, and will only do the absolute minimum required to qualify (if they cannot find an excuse to avoid doing so completely). Private citizens who carry, openly or concealed, have much more interest in their firearms and many train to levels well above average police personnel.
Courses have been available for at least a couple of decades, and are required in many states prior to granting permits. This is not new, and not complicated.
And, as we have recently, and sadly, seen, we cannot predict what supposedly trained sheriff's deputies will do, either.
After that line of defence crumbles, there is
nobody else left but teachers and support staff.
A perfect reaction is not expected, nor required. Even an imperfect one can save at least a few students.
And that is infinitely preferable to nothing.
Til Valhall said:
More guns for average people = less trust and more unpredictability
Facts do not bear that statement out. The US homicide rate has fallen dramatically over the last three or so decades even as firearms sales have shot up, and more people - especially women - are getting into sport shooting and self-defence.
I am well aware that, wherever I am in the US, a healthy number of people are carrying concealed firearms, and I am anything but alarmed. I am also very aware of the areas in which people are unlikely to be carrying. As I have no interest in going into those places anyway, avoidance is easy.
Til Valhall said:
Firearms in the hands of regular citizens are just fun at best, but only lead to tragic events at worst.
To many, they are essential defensive tools. There are some very violent neighbourhoods in the US, and some very violent people who wander much safer neighbourhoods looking for easy targets. Many criminal attacks have been stopped by armed ordinary citizens, usually without a single shot fired. Nobody should be denied the means to protect themselves.
Til Valhall said:
hunters do not need the kinds of firearms used in mass shootings or most criminal activity.
Nobody
needs anything beyond basic oxygen, water, food, shelter, warmth, and some means of preventing greedy people from trying to take that away from them.
Yes, a lot of people would go insane without wifi. I know. That's sad.
And those "kinds of firearms" would simply be replace by others if they magically disappeared.
Til Valhall said:
Ideally, gun control is about preempting that situation in the first place.
In reality, it does not, cannot, and never has.
Til Valhall said:
And of course it should only apply to regular citizens.
Rather than criminals? Really? Why?
With what else do you not trust your fellow "regular" citizens?
Whom
do you trust?
Til Valhall said:
It's crazy that gun control is so nonexistent in the U.S
There are over 20,000 federal, state, and county/municipal firearms laws on the books in the US. Is that not enough? Would one more help? Five? A hundred? What?
Laws merely define what constitutes a crime and lay out the punishment. They do not actually prevent anything from happening.
Til Valhall said:
some teachers are allowed to carry firearms, but not peanut butter.
I'm not aware of a single case of a teacher shooting a student who was not posing a real and immediate danger. I am also unaware of anybody dying from an anaphylactic reaction to a firearm. I am, however, aware of several students succumbing to exposure to peanut products.
mariomike said:
Perhaps we can discuss gun politics in our 157-page "The Great Gun Control Debate".
https://milnet.ca/forums/threads/28692.3900.html
It's not quite that easy to separate, as there is a lot of crossover, and not worthwhile to try.
Kat Stevens said:
Hopefully, the intent of arming a percentage of teachers isn't about sending them out on seek and destroy missions in the hallways. I hope it would be about bunkering down in the classroom, and protecting the kids inside it. I would think a shooter would think twice if he was uncertain about the reception on the other side of that door. This is not to say I necessarily agree with the idea, but I can see some merit to it.
Nobody would send them out. That would be their decision, based upon their assessment of the situation and best possible means of influencing it, being the only person capable of doing so.
The intent is to give them, and their students, a last-ditch fighting chance of survival.
daftandbarmy said:
Professional soldiers aren't even safe with the weapons we train them to use full time.
Arm millions of teachers? The deaths and injuries from accidental classroom discharges (ACDs) etc would dwarf school shooting victims within a year.
Yet there have been some armed teachers in some classrooms for a few years already, and millions of ordinary citizens carrying firearms either concealed or openly for decades, without an epidemic of NDs.
None of the wild predictions of "blood in the streets" as successive states have approved either open or concealed carry, or both, have come to pass.
Ordinary citizens with concealed carry permits have lower arrest and conviction rates than police. On a per capita basis, they kill more criminals and fewer innocent people annually than police do.
Many of them are far better trained than police, are more readily able to identify a threat as they are closer, and have more of an incentive to get it right as they will be dealt with more harshly than any policeman would be for the same error. The biggest fear that concealed-carry permit holders have, secondary to shooting an innocent person, is losing their permit. Very few permits are revoked, and most revocations are for non-firearms violations.
What differentiates the perceived abilities or inabilities of police and private citizens? The uniform? The badge? The pay?