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Every mass shooting is against a soft (unarmed) target.
I'll agree with throwing four more armed cops in every school FWIW. This is just an example of a bad decision.
On an individual level, I'd PROBABLY be able to do something heroic to try to save kids I didn't know. I THINK I would.
It would still be HEROIC though and not a common action. A fellow who pulls up lame shouldn't be a cop. Not sure how much I'd prosecute him though....maybe go after the pension saying, "when you signed up to be a cop, you signed up to be a hero, and you weren't so we're not paying out".
Its a tough line though. My kid, I save or die trying. Other kids, or lord knows an adult, I might not reach as far in front of the oncoming train to save.
Not anymore. School shooting? After the donut break. Not my job.What? That WAS their duty
Every mass shooting is against a soft (unarmed) target.
I'll agree with throwing four more armed cops in every school FWIW. This is just an example of a bad decision.
On an individual level, I'd PROBABLY be able to do something heroic to try to save kids I didn't know. I THINK I would.
It would still be HEROIC though and not a common action. A fellow who pulls up lame shouldn't be a cop. Not sure how much I'd prosecute him though....maybe go after the pension saying, "when you signed up to be a cop, you signed up to be a hero, and you weren't so we're not paying out".
Its a tough line though. My kid, I save or die trying. Other kids, or lord knows an adult, I might not reach as far in front of the oncoming train to save.
Having armed teachers changes the equation.
A federal judge says Broward schools and the Sheriff’s Office had no legal duty to protect students during the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
U.S. District Judge Beth Bloom dismissed a suit filed by 15 students who claimed they were traumatized by the crisis in February. The suit named six defendants, including the Broward school district and the Broward Sheriff’s Office, as well as school deputy Scot Peterson and campus monitor Andrew Medina.
Every mass shooting is against a soft (unarmed) target.
I'll agree with throwing four more armed cops in every school FWIW. This is just an example of a bad decision.
On an individual level, I'd PROBABLY be able to do something heroic to try to save kids I didn't know. I THINK I would.
It would still be HEROIC though and not a common action. A fellow who pulls up lame shouldn't be a cop. Not sure how much I'd prosecute him though....maybe go after the pension saying, "when you signed up to be a cop, you signed up to be a hero, and you weren't so we're not paying out".
Its a tough line though. My kid, I save or die trying. Other kids, or lord knows an adult, I might not reach as far in front of the oncoming train to save.
Having armed teachers changes the equation.
Does having real security at the school not?
I've met a lot of teachers. Gals who were Education Majors seemed to take a liking to me, they like immature fellows maybe lol. I think we may be better just paying real professionals to guard these schools and make them hard targets instead of coping out and not taxing gun sales by expecting education majors to defend your children.
Sorry to break it to you, but USSC has ruled that police are under no obligation to protect the people that they allegedly "serve and protect"....They're basically an armed revenue collection agency.Judge Bloom should hang her head in abject shame. Protecting people is not only the duty of the police, it is their number one reason for existence.
I support "School Resource Officer" programs, such as the one at Great Mills High School in St. Mary's County (an exurb of Washington DC) which puts one LEO in each high school, plus two additional ones to split between the county's middle schools. Earlier this year, one of the SRO's - who also happens to be a SWAT team member - sprinted toward gunfire and exchanged fire with the shooter, who became the only casualty after he shot himself in response. That's how to protect kids, not to whimper in safety as shots ring out, only to later cower behind a nitwit judge's inane ruling.
If I could, I'd put SRO programs in every county. Here, read all about it:
5 things to know about Md. SRO Blaine Gaskill
More guns, please.
Every mass shooting is against a soft (unarmed) target.
I'll agree with throwing four more armed cops in every school FWIW. This is just an example of a bad decision.
On an individual level, I'd PROBABLY be able to do something heroic to try to save kids I didn't know. I THINK I would.
It would still be HEROIC though and not a common action. A fellow who pulls up lame shouldn't be a cop. Not sure how much I'd prosecute him though....maybe go after the pension saying, "when you signed up to be a cop, you signed up to be a hero, and you weren't so we're not paying out".
Its a tough line though. My kid, I save or die trying. Other kids, or lord knows an adult, I might not reach as far in front of the oncoming train to save.
Having armed teachers changes the equation.
Does having real security at the school not?
I've met a lot of teachers. Gals who were Education Majors seemed to take a liking to me, they like immature fellows maybe lol. I think we may be better just paying real professionals to guard these schools and make them hard targets instead of coping out and not taxing gun sales by expecting education majors to defend your children.
More guns, please.
More guns, please.
Yeah. So the cops can show up and shoot the armed teachers . Like they did at that Alabama mall and that Cali club.
Read the OP. Judge ruled Security has no legal obligation to protect the kids. So there is no such thing as a security force. So it’s up to each teacher interested in the safety of the kids and themselves.Every mass shooting is against a soft (unarmed) target.
I'll agree with throwing four more armed cops in every school FWIW. This is just an example of a bad decision.
On an individual level, I'd PROBABLY be able to do something heroic to try to save kids I didn't know. I THINK I would.
It would still be HEROIC though and not a common action. A fellow who pulls up lame shouldn't be a cop. Not sure how much I'd prosecute him though....maybe go after the pension saying, "when you signed up to be a cop, you signed up to be a hero, and you weren't so we're not paying out".
Its a tough line though. My kid, I save or die trying. Other kids, or lord knows an adult, I might not reach as far in front of the oncoming train to save.
Having armed teachers changes the equation.
Does having real security at the school not?
I've met a lot of teachers. Gals who were Education Majors seemed to take a liking to me, they like immature fellows maybe lol. I think we may be better just paying real professionals to guard these schools and make them hard targets instead of coping out and not taxing gun sales by expecting education majors to defend your children.