74 school shootings in the past 77 weeks.
Not 74 chemical bombings, not 74 stabbings, not 74 bows and arrows, not 74 hatchet attacks. The common denominator (do I need to define that term for you?) is guns.
If you Ammo-sexuals want to keep, sleep with and insert your guns into your privates because I really think it's that sick, then figure out a way to stop this epidemic.
This data tells me that the parents of these kids are pretty much out of touch with their kids, so start with them.
Do something besides shoving the 2nd Amendment in my face and whining about your ******* rights. Your rights end when innocent people who cannot protect themselves die.
School Shootings in America Since Sandy Hook | Everytown for Gun Safety - School Shootings in America Since Sandy Hook
#
Date
City
State
School Name
School Type
1. 1/08/2013 Fort Myers FL Apostolic Revival Center Christian School K-12
2. 1/10/2013 Taft CA Taft Union High School K-12
3. 1/15/2013 St. Louis MO Stevens Institute of Business & Arts College/University
4. 1/15/2013 Hazard KY Hazard Community and Technical College College/University
5. 1/16/2013 Chicago IL Chicago State University College/University
6. 1/22/2013
Houston TX Lone Star College North Harris Campus College/University
7. 1/31/2013 Atlanta GA Price Middle School K-12
8. 2/1/2013 Atlanta GA Morehouse College College/University
9. 2/7/2013 Fort Pierce FL Indian River St. College College/University
10. 2/13/2013 San Leandro CA Hillside Elementary School K-12
11. 2/27/2013 Atlanta GA Henry W. Grady HS K-12
12. 3/18/2013 Orlando FL University of Central Florida College/University
13. 3/21/2013 Southgate MI Davidson Middle School K-12
14. 4/12/2013 Christianburg VA New River Community College College/University
15. 4/13/2013 Elizabeth City NC Elizabeth City State University College/University
16. 4/15/2013 Grambling LA Grambling State University College/University
17. 4/16/2013 Tuscaloosa AL Stillman College College/University
18. 4/29/2013 Cincinnati OH La Salle High School K-12
19. 6/7/2013 Santa Monica CA Santa Monica College College/University
20. 6/19/2013 W. Palm Beach FL Alexander W. Dreyfoos School of the Arts K-12
21. 8/15/2013 Clarksville TN Northwest High School K-12
22. 8/20/2013 Decatur GA Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy K-12
23. 8/22/2013 Memphis TN Westside Elementary School K-12
24. 8/23/2013 Sardis MS North Panola High School K-12
25. 8/30/2013 Winston-Salem NC Carver High School K-12
26. 9/21/2013 Savannah GA Savannah State University College/University
27. 9/28/2013 Gray ME New Gloucester High School K-12
28. 10/4/2013 Pine Hills FL Agape Christian Academy K-12
29. 10/15/2013 Austin TX Lanier High School K-12
30. 10/21/2013 Sparks NV Sparks Middle School K-12
31. 11/1/2013 Algona IA Algona High/Middle School K-12
32. 11/2/2013 Greensboro NC North Carolina A&T State University College/University
33. 11/3/2013 Stone Mountain GA Stephenson High School K-12
34. 11/21/2013 Rapid City SD South Dakota School of Mines & Technology College/University
35. 12/4/2013 Winter Garden FL West Orange High School K-12
36. 12/13/2013 Arapahoe County CO Arapahoe High School K-12
37. 12/19/2013 Fresno CA Edison High School K-12
38. 1/9/2014 Jackson TN Liberty Technology Magnet HS K-12
39. 1/14/2014 Roswell NM Berrendo Middle School K-12
40. 1/15/2014 Lancaster PA Martin Luther King Jr. ES K-12
41. 1/17/2014 Philadelphia PA Delaware Valley Charter HS K-12
42. 1/20/2014 Chester PA Widener University College/University
43. 1/21/2014 West Lafayette IN Purdue University College/University
44. 1/24/2014 Orangeburg SC South Carolina State University College/University
45. 1/28/2014 Nashville TN Tennessee State University College/University
46. 1/28/2014 Grambling LA Grambling State University College/University
47. 1/30/2014 Palm Bay FL Eastern Florida State College College/University
48. 1/31/2014 Phoenix AZ Cesar Chavez High School K-12
49. 1/31/2014 Des Moines IA North High School K-12
50. 2/7/2014 Bend OR Bend High School K-12
51. 2/10/2014 Salisbury NC Salisbury High School K-12
52. 2/11/2014 Lyndhurst OH Brush High School K-12
53. 2/12/2014 Jackson TN Union University College/University
54. 2/20/2014 Raytown MO Raytown Success Academy K-12
55. 3/2/2014 Westminster MD McDaniel College College/University
56. 3/7/2014 Tallulah LA Madison High School K-12
57. 3/8/2014 Oshkosh WI University of Wisconsin Oshkosh College/University
58. 3/21/2014 Newark DE University of Delaware College/University
59. 3/30/2014 Savannah GA Savannah State University College/University
60. 4/3/2014 Kent OH Kent State University College/University
61. 4/7/2014 Roswell NM Eastern New Mexico University-Roswell College/University
62. 4/11/2014 Detroit MI East English Village Preparatory Academy K-12
63. 4/21/2014 Griffith IN St. Mary Catholic School K-12
64. 4/21/2014 Provo UT Provo High School K-12
65. 4/26/2014 Council Bluffs IA Iowa Western Community College College/University
66. 5/2/2014 Milwaukee WI Marquette University College/University
67. 5/3/2014 Everett WA Horizon Elementary School K-12
68. 5/4/2014 Augusta GA Paine College College/University
69. 5/5/2014 Augusta GA Paine College College/University
70. 5/8/2014 Georgetown KY Georgetown College College/University
71. 5/8/2014 Lawrenceville GA Georgia Gwinnett College College/University
72. 5/21/2014 Milwaukee WI Clark Street School K-12
73. 6/5/2014 Seattle WA Seattle Pacific University College/University
74. 6/10/2014 Troutdale OR Reynolds High School K-12
Been school shootings since before the country was a country.
The History of Nearly 250 Years of School Shootings in America
While they seem to be on the increase, it's not a new phenomenae. And I can't help but wonder how much media coverage of them plays a part. If we didn't sensationalize and make famous the shooters (name a victim of Columbine...Hard isn't it. Now name one of the two shooters. Easy.) I wonder if they'd be so common. It's like the coverage now is putting the option into disgruntled people's heads. "I'm mad as hell and not gonna take it any more! Hmm, could always bring my Dad's gun to school..." I was bullied throughout junior high but it never once occured to me to get a gun. I think then our gun-filled culture also shoulders some of the blame. And it's time we finally face facts and look at entertainment, in particular, movies and video games. We're not talking Street Fighter and Galaga any more. Videogames today, especially on home consoles, are defacto combat simulators. And when we call entertainment the gunplay and violent acting out amongst society, you have to wonder if for the marginally sane it's giving ideas they don't need.
Most of us grew up with violent movies, and arguably, thinking of the 80s gore-flicks, much more violent ones than today. But the ones now are very gun-centric. Even the heroes are using guns. Isn't mythological badguys any more but rank and file people armed to the teeth and Ramboing up. If we're serious about doing something about school shootings and gun violence in general we need to be willing to do the hard things. Some of these include:
- forbidding through legislation graphic violence in media like movies and tv shows (the tv ratings system is a total failure since now they can show anything they like and simply slap a tv-ma rating onto it, whereas previously certain content like grotesque violence was completely banned regardless. We should go back to that standard.) Censorship may be an ugly word especially to me as a liberal, but come on, where's the artistic merit of showing the human body being shot full of holes?
- ban the sales of violent or criminal-themed videogames. It's outrageous we're making popular game franchises where the "hero" is an assassin or street criminal (this means you "Assassin's Creed" and "Grand Theft Auto.") And impose felony charges on anyone selling such material (otherwise, banned materials just wind up being obtained via black market sources and most would roll their eyes about the obtaining of "just a videogame.")
- add mandatory classes to k-12 schools of some sort of interpersonal relationships featuring topics like conflict resolution, no-bullying, team building, and similar subject matter.
- forbid news media from graphicly showing a school shooting story. Can mention it happened, but no video of the fleeing students or responding law enforcement (both I'm sure are a thrill for future shooters to see) and no mention of the shooter(s.) If you can become famous for it, it'll happen more, deny them what they seek.
- teach actual sexual education. This is critical. Teens wanna have sex, deal with it. Instead of teaching abstinance, or sex is only for adults, teach masturbation, how to have sex without risking pregnancy, how to use birth control, and generally encourage sexual behaviour instead of denying at-risk-for-violence people like puberty-stricken teens from enjoying what their bodies are screaming for. If you can't have sexual relationships out in the open and have it a good and positive thing it has to be secret. And secrecy breeds stress and too much stress results in negative acting out. Rather than basically driving kids insane by repressing their sexuality, encourage them to express it safely and positively.
More gun laws isn't the answer. It's a knee-jerk feel-good response that doesn't do anything. Shooters just use whatever isn't banned. Instead we need to recondition society towards resolving problems more constructively and not via violence.