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SENSIBLE SOLUTIONS FOR THE SCHOOL SAFETY & GUN CONTROL ISSUE THA - Duration: 7:12.
SENSIBLE SOLUTIONS FOR THE SCHOOL SAFETY & GUN CONTROL ISSUE THAT WE NEVER HEAR ABOUT
BY ANNA RODGERS
It�s no surprise that the topic of school shootings is on most people�s minds, these
shooting sprees have become very common in the USA, so much so that it simply cannot
be ignored.
There are many opinions and ideas about what can be done about this very serious issue.
Many people think that simply banning guns is the answer, but is that really going to
end violent acts towards others?
One post that has received many shares (at the time of writing this it was up to 100,000)
is one by Clint Fiore, father to 4 children who has been involved with �Rachel�s Challenge�
an anti-violence, anti-bullying school safety organization which was formed after what happened
at Columbine High School.
I loved the points Clint raised in his post and I personally think members of Congress
need to see this list. Please make sure you read the expanded info section which you can
access at the bottom of this post.
Let us know what you think, and if you like it, please share and tweet to members of congress!
Here�s the link to the original post:
Message from CE: Here is an article examining the potential �false flag� aspect of this
type of violence.
Defending guns is getting tiresome. The same impossible-to-implement gun-control ideas
are trotted out after every shooting with a fixation on the scary object. Few of you
on my friends list know I dedicated years of my life right after college to a program
born out of Columbine that�s the most effective at reducing school shooting tragedies and
that I�ve traveled the country to visit middle schools and high schools in 30+ states
speaking as well as doing work to make schools safer.
1) Fatherlessness needs to be addressed. Kids need dads- most shooters don�t have an involved
dad. Can we connect boys without fathers to father-figure mentors? This is also a theme
in the inner-city, less-publicized, yet more-frequent gun crimes in minority communities.
2) Adults need to be held accountable. The Parkland shooting last week is �Exhibit
A� on that. Dozens of adults at the school, local law enforcement agencies, and even the
FBI knew about this kid and what he said he was going to do. Another adult, the SRO on
duty, could have stopped it while it was happening but never went in. How many adults around
this situation will be charged with crimes like negligence or manslaughter for their
blatant failures? My guess is zero. How many will lose their jobs? My guess is zero. Nobody
does anything because you risk nothing by doing nothing and get in trouble if you take
a proactive approach and try to do address things before the blood is spilled. This is
up and down our education and law enforcement systems.
3) Boys need safe environments to fight and let out their physical aggression. Young men
involved in physically violent sports like football, wrestling, karate, etc. typically
do not become mass murderers. I feel like our present culture is trying to take the
fight out of our boys, but it�s still hard-wired into them. Where no healthy outlets for this
natural aggression exist, unhealthy ones will take their place.
4) The role of pharmaceutical drugs in mass shootings needs to be thoroughly investigated.
It�s too common of a theme to be ignored as a potential factor. Too many of our kids
are getting drugged up instead of getting the care they really need. Right on the labels
of these mood-altering drugs are side effects like �Hallucinations- loss of contact with
reality.� and �Suicidal thoughts.� Yet we don�t immediately ask about the prescriptions
these kids are on, instead focusing on what kind of gun they used.
5) Training kids to huddle together as stationary targets on the ground, HAS TO STOP. It�s
stupid and getting our kids killed in greater numbers during these events. If they can�t
get in a secured room separated from the shooter, they need to run or fight, period. Get out
the window or tackle the shooter etc are all way better things to teach. There are great
programs to better train our kids on how to react to this threat.
6) Empower and encourage teachers and school administrators to have a plan, have the support
of the district, and secure their classrooms the way they�re comfortable with. Too many
wonderful teachers with hearts of lions for protecting their kids are fearful bringing
up their desires to their bosses whom will point to policy and liability concerns over
common-sense solutions the teacher needs and wants. Teachers, if you don�t get the support
you need, do what you need to do anyways quietly. Damn the system. Keep our kids safe. There
isn�t a one-size-fits-all answer here, but all kinds of things could help like: ways
to block/harden doors, weapons (gun or non-gun) to have a fighting chance if a shooter makes
it through the door, and additional escape options like rope ladders for 2nd story windows
teachers can deploy, etc. We can�t have a cop everywhere and even if we do, there�s
no guarantee they won�t be taking their sweet time outside like the Parkland SRO did
while your class is in the cross-hairs. Teachers are right there and the first line of defence
and they need to think about it and take it seriously and not get in trouble if they do.
7) Finally, and most importantly, we need to improve the culture of our nation and our
schools. We need to value human life highly. We need love. We need kindness. We need compassion.
We need to look for the kids that are becoming isolated and need help and go help them. We
need more than just anger at what�s wrong, we need to celebrate the good stories and
champions of kindness. Kids that care for one another don�t kill each other. We need
to touch the hearts of kids and train them up in morality and virtue- not just pack their
heads full of information.
This is exactly what we focused on when I worked for Rachel�s Challenge, one of the
top anti-violence programs in the country, and we saw tons of lives saved by changing
the culture of schools from the inside out. (would-be-shooters with kill lists turning
themselves in, gang members laying down their colors, suicides planned for that night cancelled,
etc.) Invite them to your school as a great way to start this cultural transformation.
Clint Fiore, the author of this post also has now expanded his list with suggestions
for action which you can access here: this is highly recommended to read.
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