lefty1117
Gold Member
I'll just leave this here and then I'm out because this thread is degrading quickly. Just leaving food for thought and you can take it or leave it, of course.
Last week my son's high school had an incident with a sick young man that smashed his van through the gates, knocked down a tree, and then started trying to get into classrooms. Luckily the area of campus he was at happened to not have students there at time, they were all in class elsewhere. He attacked the local security guard and then when police arrived ultimately he was shot and killed. I was one of those parents getting calls about school lockdowns due to an incident, and then hearing from my child afterwards about the running and the chaos - though from what I can surmise overall the school and students responded pretty well. Because in this day and age they have to drill for these things... I think on that incident and then I think about today, and the main difference is that one guy had weapons and one guy didn't.
It's really that simple. If we want to reduce the loss of life, then make it a more stringent process for people to own these weapons so we can have a greater assurance that responsible, well adjusted people are handling them. Certainly, we should do more to help disturbed people - of course, I don't think any one would deny that. Stronger gun measures will not stop every incident and criminals will be criminals, but if we can at least save some lives isn't it worth doing?
Last week my son's high school had an incident with a sick young man that smashed his van through the gates, knocked down a tree, and then started trying to get into classrooms. Luckily the area of campus he was at happened to not have students there at time, they were all in class elsewhere. He attacked the local security guard and then when police arrived ultimately he was shot and killed. I was one of those parents getting calls about school lockdowns due to an incident, and then hearing from my child afterwards about the running and the chaos - though from what I can surmise overall the school and students responded pretty well. Because in this day and age they have to drill for these things... I think on that incident and then I think about today, and the main difference is that one guy had weapons and one guy didn't.
It's really that simple. If we want to reduce the loss of life, then make it a more stringent process for people to own these weapons so we can have a greater assurance that responsible, well adjusted people are handling them. Certainly, we should do more to help disturbed people - of course, I don't think any one would deny that. Stronger gun measures will not stop every incident and criminals will be criminals, but if we can at least save some lives isn't it worth doing?