FORUMS > The Sin Bin > Armed teachers |
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973_1515165968.gif Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total:d7dc4b20b2c2dd7b76ac6eac29d5604e_973.gif |
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To help prevent more school massacres, rather than ban assault rifles, the US state of Dakota has approved legislation to allow armed teachers in schools. These will be called "sentinels".
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-21722377
Would you feel safer knowing that little Johnny's teacher is packing a Smith & Wesson?
Would he/she be expected to instantly be able to produce the weapon and take out an armed lunatic with an assault rifle that bursts into the classroom? Or will the teacher become the first and rather obvious target?
Please could somebody wake me up, as I sort of assumed that I must be in some sort of weird dream, but can't snap out of it.
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To help prevent more school massacres, rather than ban assault rifles, the US state of Dakota has approved legislation to allow armed teachers in schools. These will be called "sentinels".
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-21722377
Would you feel safer knowing that little Johnny's teacher is packing a Smith & Wesson?
Would he/she be expected to instantly be able to produce the weapon and take out an armed lunatic with an assault rifle that bursts into the classroom? Or will the teacher become the first and rather obvious target?
Please could somebody wake me up, as I sort of assumed that I must be in some sort of weird dream, but can't snap out of it.
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| Quote: Ferocious Aardvark "To help prevent more school massacres, rather than ban assault rifles,'"
But you know how a gun ban works in America? The Govt announce (or there are strong rumours of) a ban of 5 models of gun and ammunition in 18 months time. So the price of the guns triples, the gun manufacturers ramp up production of these guns and everyone who might have wanted one buys them. Then when the ban comes into effect there are 10 million of these guns already in peoples homes and dealers can still sell them because they were manufactured before the ban came into effect.
Yep, it is ****ing crazy, but that's the US of A.
Quote: Ferocious Aardvark "Would you feel safer knowing that little Johnny's teacher is packing a Smith & Wesson? '"
No. I think that there will probably be more deaths caused through accidents if lots of teachers start carrying guns.
Quote: Ferocious Aardvark "Would he/she be expected to instantly be able to produce the weapon and take out an armed lunatic with an assault rifle that bursts into the classroom? Or will the teacher become the first and rather obvious target?'"
You're not going to know which teachers are carrying. The hope is that the knowledge that several teachers might be carrying deters people from shooting up schools in the first place.
In KY it's a criminal offence to carry a gun on school property. So a crazed gunman who walks into a high school football stadium is pretty much the only person armed. The change in the law is so that teachers, and probably parents in the crowd as well, can take out the crazed killer as soon as they are seen. Rather than having 5 minutes to shoot as many people as he can before the cops come and there's a shootout.
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| There's always the chance that the teacher will 'snap'.Holycow god forbid
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| Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho "
In KY it's a criminal offence to carry a gun on school property. So a crazed gunman who walks into a high school football stadium is pretty much the only person armed. The change in the law is so that teachers, and probably parents in the crowd as well, can take out the crazed killer as soon as they are seen. Rather than having 5 minutes to shoot as many people as he can before the cops come and there's a shootout.'"
Thats always the theory that gets quoted back at me whenever I question the validity of having every citizen armed whenever they go to the post office - its just in case the post office gets robbed while they are there and all of the customers can then start firing off rounds at random rather than stand and watch.
Its one of those theories that sounds good if you are a gun retailer or manufacturer and you have the government in your pockets - the reality of standing in a post office queue with one hooded assailant at the counter and twenty pensioners searching through their bags for their concealed weapons, then shooting them into the ceiling while asking their neighbour if this is the safety catch, doesn't fill me full of confidence, or ease my mind that you might be the one in there catching all of those bullets instead of the robber.
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| I don't think the post office scenario is a good one to use. I don't think post offices or banks want their customers or staff challenging armed robbers.
The scenario that the US gun lobby would use is your home at 2.30am in the morning. You're upstairs with your family all asleep in your rooms when your front door is being smashed in. At that moment would you like a gun and the knowledge of how to use it, or are you happy waiting for the protection of the police, who could be 5 minutes away at the very least?
IMO there is no real solution to school shootings. The USA being the gun crazy country it is means school shootings are going to happen.
The NRA's "solution" is more guns - this time in the hands of teachers, cops inside schools and, scarily, even janitors. I'm against that. I think there will be lives lost through accidents that will probably mean that even more people are injured or killed than through school shootings. I think the cost of having an armed cop inside every school is a ridiculous waste of money that should be spent on teaching. And the cop would be the first person targeted by any shooter.
But politicians have to do "something". Which means stupid laws that sound like they might work but are often counter-productive.
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| Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho "
The NRA's "solution" is more guns - this time in the hands of teachers, cops inside schools and, scarily, even janitors. '"
Eh?
Why should anyone be more fearful of a janitor with a gun than anyone else?
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| Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho "I don't think the post office scenario is a good one to use. I don't think post offices or banks want their customers or staff challenging armed robbers.
The scenario that the US gun lobby would use is your home at 2.30am in the morning. You're upstairs with your family all asleep in your rooms when your front door is being smashed in. At that moment would you like a gun and the knowledge of how to use it, or are you happy waiting for the protection of the police, who could be 5 minutes away at the very least?
'"
I've actually been in that very scenario in a previous house - was woken up at about 1am one morning by two loud bangs, when you're asleep you hear the first but then have to wake up so you're not sure if its real or not, then came the second one and you think "Is that our house or next doors?"
Went downstairs making lots of noise (you really don't want to sneak up on a burglar) giving him/them plenty of time to scarper to find the back door kicked in and our Golden Retriever looking out of the door with a puzzled expression on his face, he slept in the kitchen but wasn't a guard dog by any description so had just laid there and watched while some scrote stole my wallet and mobile off the kitchen table.
The police caught him, he was well known to them for break-ins but I still don't know how he managed to kick in (with two kicks from a low down position as the back door was up two steps) a upvc door with multi-point locking plus two additional euro-bolts, he was a drug user so presumably that helped and I'm quite glad that his mode of operation was snatch and run - you really wouldn't want to tackle someone with that sort of strength when you're still half asleep and he is high on something and desperate to get away - despite what macho posturing some may take.
What is different about the UK and USA is that even if I had come face-to-face with him I could be pretty certain that a druggie burglar wouldn't be carrying a gun, probably not even a knife (I may be naive there) as going to break and enter pre-armed with a knife suddenly ups the sentencing, taking a gun is asking for a long time in jail.
He got a jail sentence because he was a repeat offender and had lots of similar break-ins to take into consideration, he wasn't a master criminal, could barely walk and chew gum at the same time - he ran to a nearby service station and bought some cigarettes with my debit card (pre chip and pin) then took £20 cash back and used my mobile to call for a taxi company based on an estate where he lived about five miles away - the police checked the mobile records the next morning and saw the number he'd dialled and checked the debit card record at the same time to find the transaction, then went to the garage and got their cctv, when they got to his house he was still wearing the same trainers that had left a big imprint on our back door - it was hardly Sherlock Homes stuff.
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| A screw driver or jemmy used to break in to your house can be used on you. Personally I have cricket bat downstairs and a hefty rolling pin up stairs (not enough room to swing the cricket bat) for protection. If the police ask, I like baking in the bedroom, honest.
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| Quote: JerryChicken "What is different about the UK and USA is that even if I had come face-to-face with him I could be pretty certain that a druggie burglar wouldn't be carrying a gun, probably not even a knife (I may be naive there) as going to break and enter pre-armed with a knife suddenly ups the sentencing, taking a gun is asking for a long time in jail.'"
The biggest difference between the US and UK is that the US home invader is risking getting shot and killed. If someone is crazy enough to break into a US home at 2.30am you pretty much do need a gun.
My best friend was a "crazy" gun guy who had a plan for what him and his family would do if there was ever a home invasion. I am a "it'll never happen" person and figure his kids are more at risk of being shot by accident because he has guns in his house than they ever would be of being caught up in a home invasion.
But if someone smashed my door in at 2.30am in America, I do feel my first thought would have been that I was the wrong one and I had let down my wife and daughter.
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973_1515165968.gif Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total:d7dc4b20b2c2dd7b76ac6eac29d5604e_973.gif |
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| Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho "...
You're not going to know which teachers are carrying. The hope is that the knowledge that several teachers might be carrying deters people from shooting up schools in the first place.'"
Some hope. AFAIK the recent school shootings seem to invariably have been by some nut with a deathwish so the risk of them being killed would obviously not be a factor in their calculations. They usually shoot themselves at the end anyway.
Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho " ,,,The change in the law is so that teachers, and probably parents in the crowd as well, can take out the crazed killer as soon as they are seen. Rather than having 5 minutes to shoot as many people as he can before the cops come and there's a shootout.'"
First though, unless he has shot someone then you don't know if he will. You don't know even if he is carrying a real weapon.
Second, realistically, are they seriously suggesting that a teacher, with maybe a couple of sessions at the local gun club, can be expected to draw their weapon, and coolly "take out" a madman with an assault rifle? I don't think so, and the thought of several parents and teachers all in a panic loosing off shots at random is surely a recipe for utter disaster. Not to mention a guarantee that a teacher will "take out" a parent or vice versa in the mistaken belief that they were the crazed gunman. It sounds superficially attractive until you think about it for more than 2 seconds.
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| Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho "The biggest difference between the US and UK is that the US home invader is risking getting shot and killed. If someone is crazy enough to break into a US home at 2.30am you pretty much do need a gun.
My best friend was a "crazy" gun guy who had a plan for what him and his family would do if there was ever a home invasion. I am a "it'll never happen" person and figure his kids are more at risk of being shot by accident because he has guns in his house than they ever would be of being caught up in a home invasion.
But if someone smashed my door in at 2.30am in America, I do feel my first thought would have been that I was the wrong one and I had let down my wife and daughter.'"
One other opinion that I come across when corresponding with acquaintances in America is the Republican attitude of "government is bad" which is difficult to understand really, I'll add that these attitudes have been most strongly expressed in Utah by Mormons (not ultra extremist Mormons, but church members anyway) so there may be a slight dash of persecution in there as well - the attitude is that as citizens they do not want a high level of central government control and arm themselves in order to prevent this, basically they are armed ready for another civil war.
I think that this is where the UK and USA differ immensely in that here we elect a government to run the business of the country including law and order and when there is a law and order problem ( like the riots of a couple of years ago) we turn towards the government and expect them to stop it - its why they are there - the attitude that seems to prevail (from this outsiders view) in the USA is that the citizen will take care of law and order by the process of arming themselves and the police will come along later and clean up, those citizens then expect to be praised for their actions, whether or not they got the right guy.
I can't tell you how many casual internet conversations have escalated into complete lunacy ranting about not taking away their rights to protect themselves from an overpowering government and Obama's healthcare plan seemed to fit into this somewhere down the line too, I have actually been told by a normally sensible family person that they would rather die of a curable illness if they couldn't pay for their own treatment rather than accept a public health system subscribed to from their taxation - its a puzzle for a UK citizen thats for sure.
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| I don't get that crazy **** about arming yourself against the tyrannical government. For me that's crazyiness close to the American's belief in god and I just shake my head at.
But natural disasters are a different thing. If there's a large earthquake, tornado or hurricane and a massive area is affected then it could be a long time before help is coming.
I think it was 2009 that my area of Kentucky was without power for a week because of an ice storm. Basically the rain froze as soon it fell so all the trees were covered in so much ice that they couldn't carry the weight and they went over, dragging down power lines with them.
It was just a week and it was also only a few states that were affected so things didn't get too bad, but if the whole country was affected and it took a few weeks then things could get real bad, real quick.
New Orleans was an example of people going crazy. My friend said that the worst place to be was inside the Superdome because they banned anyone from carrying firearms. My friend said there were rapes and murders in there because people couldn't protect themselves. I'd never heard of this and have never checked reports, but it was something he believed in.
I don't understand how the American public can be so stupid as to carry on with their health insurance system when ours beats the living hell out of theirs. I did catch a Michael Savage rant on the radio. He was saying how he had a heart attack or something like that. And the doctor was telling him that if he was in Europe with their social health care then he'd have been dead. I was like, "WTF are you talking about???"
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| Quote: Lord God Jose Mourinho "
My best friend was a "crazy" gun guy who had a plan for what him and his family would do if there was ever a home invasion. I am a "it'll never happen" person and figure his kids are more at risk of being shot by accident because he has guns in his house than they ever would be of being caught up in a home invasion..'"
"Home invasions" is not a term you see used in common parlance in the UK at all. It is in the US. We talk of burglaries they talk of "home invasions" and there is a big difference in what the two imply IMO.
At least some US citizens clearly feel the need to protect themselves from "home invasions" when really they would probably be better served by letting the police deal with a burglary after the event (because I am sure that is what most home invasions really are).
As you say the risk of accidental shooting is probably far greater than that of home invasion and for that reason even ifBut if someone smashed my door in at 2.30am in America, I do feel my first thought would have been that I was the wrong one and I had let down my wife and daughter.'"
You would still justify not having a gun because it was more dangerous keeping one around despite this. I assume here the "home invasion" was a burglary and not anyone doing something worse that would constitute something to be labelled as a "home invasion" where they would have shot you in your bed before you unlocked the gun-safe which is where you would have to keep it to prevent your kids playing cops and robbers with live ammo.
BTW I read a case not so long ago where parents were fighting to get a life jail sentence overturned for a minor who had been an on-looker when a kid of about 12 shot his stepfather dead using the "family" gun.
IMO it comes out of the same kind paranoia that makes some US citizens think they have to arm themselves to protect themselves against their own government.
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| Quote: DaveO ""Home invasions" is not a term you see used in common parlance in the UK at all. It is in the US. We talk of burglaries they talk of "home invasions" and there is a big difference in what the two imply IMO.'"
Like I said, in the US if someone is kicking your door in at 2am then they are risking being shot. That automatically means that there is a more serious intent in the US than there is here.
Quote: DaveO "At least some US citizens clearly feel the need to protect themselves from "home invasions" when really they would probably be better served by letting the police deal with a burglary after the event (because I am sure that is what most home invasions really are).'"
I can't say I agree with that premise either here or in the US.
If someone's trying to steal your things from your house then over here the reaction will be outrage and a strong desire to beat the hell out of the lowlife for trying to steal your stuff. In America the reaction will be to reach over for the shotgun and possibly blow them away.
I agree that the most sensible course of action is to barricade yourself away and call the police to let them deal with it. But part of that assumes a police response time of around 5 minutes. But there will be many places in the USA that you'd be lucky to get a police response within 30 minutes for a major emergency.
Quote: DaveO "You would still justify not having a gun because it was more dangerous keeping one around despite this. I assume here the "home invasion" was a burglary and not anyone doing something worse that would constitute something to be labelled as a "home invasion" where they would have shot you in your bed before you unlocked the gun-safe which is where you would have to keep it to prevent your kids playing cops and robbers with live ammo. '"
I agree. I'm an anti-gun guy and this is the way I think. I also think that there's a huge advantage to the "home invaders" in that they know exactly what is going on and are prepared while the homeowner is scared, panicking, frightened for their family and isn't sure whether it is someone breaking in or whether the wind has just smashed something against your door.
I also think that people don't handle guns in real life like they do in movies. I think most people would be shaking so bad they wouldn't be able to open a gun safe, never mind getting it out and using it.
My friend was totally convinced that he would be able to shoot someone who was threatening his family. I honestly don't think anyone knows how they would react in those situations until they are in them. I think that most people would completely freeze in situations like that.
Quote: DaveO "IMO it comes out of the same kind paranoia that makes some US citizens think they have to arm themselves to protect themselves against their own government.'"
The most ridiculous thing about protecting yourself from the government is that people have no right whatsoever to bear arms against the police. The easiest way to kill yourself is to reach for a gun in front of the police.
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| Quote: obeone "There's always the chance that the teacher will 'snap'.Holycow god forbid
That was my first thought. What are they going to do when a teacher snaps after taunts from students?
Just the fact that you are 100 times more likely to be killed from arms fire in the US than here shows that an absence of guns is a more effective solution than giving them to everyone.
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