The Republican solution to gun violence is always “more guns.” Their solution to mass shootings at schools is not responsible gun control and background checks, and an assault weapons ban, but to militarize our schools and turn them into hardened prisons with armed guards.
Reminder: Nearly 400 armed law enforcement officials rushed to a mass shooting at a Uvalde elementary school, but “egregiously poor decision-making” resulted in more than an hour of chaos before the gunman who took 21 lives was finally confronted and killed, according to a damning investigative report. Uvalde report: 376 officers but ‘egregiously poor’ decisions:
The nearly 80-page report was the first to criticize both state and federal law enforcement, and not just local authorities in the South Texas town for the bewildering inaction by heavily armed officers as a gunman fired inside two fourth-grade classrooms at Robb Elementary School, killing 19 students and two teachers.
And there was a school resource officer at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Parkland shooting: Armed school resource officer ‘never went in’ to school during shooting:
An armed security officer on campus where a gunman killed 17 people never went inside the high school or tried to engage the gunman during the attack.
Scot Peterson, a sheriff’s deputy assigned to the school, “was absolutely on campus through this entire event. He was armed, he was in uniform,” Israel said.
“I think he remained outside for upwards of four minutes,” Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said during a news conference.
Peterson was seen on video arriving at the west side of a building, but “he never went in,” Israel said.
So armed law enforcement on campus is no guarantee of school safety or saving a child’s life.
And yet, Arizona Superintendent Tom Horne flanked by GQP lawmakers, urged schools across the state to add school resource officers to their staff, calling them a critical defense in a time when the country is roiling from an unprecedented surge in mass shootings. Horne, GOP lawmakers call for more police on campuses as gun violence in schools surges:
“I don’t want, on my watch — or anyone else’s watch, for that matter — to see somebody invade a school and shoot people…because there’s no one there to protect the students or the staff,” Horne said, during an April 12 press conference at the state Capitol in which he unveiled the results of a public opinion poll that showed parental support for SROs in schools.
The Arizona Department of Education commissioned a poll of 614 parents, the majority of them from Maricopa County, which found that 80% approved of the presence of SROs on public school grounds. [So Tom Horne’s own poll, no bias there.] That consensus, Horne said, shows that parents want a closer relationship between law enforcement officers and schools.
“The biggest tragedy that could happen in our state is that a maniac invades a school and kills 20 kids,” he said, referencing the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting. “And if parents were to find out that school could have had a school resource officer protecting kids, but didn’t do it, you can imagine how the parents would feel about that.”
The public opinion poll is part of an ongoing push by Horne to bolster the ranks of Arizona SROs, and was conducted in response to Phoenix Union High School District’s recent reconsideration of its 2020 decision not to renew an SRO agreement. The district chose not to renew the agreement partly due to the switch to remote learning and also because of a national spotlight on racial inequality in law enforcement.
Its governing board is set to discuss a potentially revised role for SROs in district schools on April 13.
In an effort to encourage schools to hire SROs, Horne’s administration launched a grant program that offers financial aid for schools to do so, dubbed the School Safety Program. Grants also fund juvenile probation officer, social worker and school counselor hires, but after Horne warned that he would refuse to recommend school counselors to the state board if a school didn’t have any SROs on staff, the program drew criticism.
At the press briefing, he doubled down on that assertion, saying that while he appreciates the importance of school counselors as students across the country grapple with mental health issues, armed officers come first.
“I think that kids should have somebody to talk to when they’re having emotional problems,” he said. “I’m hopeful we’ll have a school resource officer and a counselor or a social worker in every school, but our first priority is to protect the lives of our students.”
Lawmakers fight for SROs, school safety legislation
Senate President Warren Petersen argued that law enforcement officers are better equipped to handle imminent danger, making them a more valuable asset than counselors.
Again, see Uvalde, Texas.
“If somebody with force comes into the school, who are you going to go stand behind to protect you?” he asked. “Do you want to go stand behind a police officer or do you want to go stand behind a counselor?”
I don’t know, Dude, an officer with a service revolver is no match for someone with an AR-15, and I am sure as hell not standing behind him – those AR-15 rounds will go right through his body, and mine.
Petersen criticized Democrats, who he said were missing the mark by advocating for more counselors when SROs are the way to protect Arizona children.
“The Republicans down here at the legislature want to make sure that our children are protected,” he said.
No, no they are not. They are more interested in protecting gun manufacturers and the gun culture. This is why they obstruct every responsible gun control and background checks, and scoff at the idea of an assault weapons ban.
This is the crazy shit that GQP legislators actually care about: Hobbs vetoes bill targeting banks that refuse to work with gun makers, NRA: “Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed a bill Tuesday that would have barred the state from working with any firm that “discriminates” against gun manufacturers or the National Rifle Association, a proposal that mirrored a Texas law passed last year. ” Guns over children. Don’t let them fool you.
House Majority Leader Leo Biasiucci agreed, slamming Democrats for voting against Republican bills introduced this session advertised as ensuring greater school and teacher preparedness during school shooting incidents.
“(Democrats voting no) is the part that’s disturbing and really frustrating for us up here as Republicans,” Biasiucci said. “We are looking for solutions.”
These are the same Republicans who demonize teachers at every turn and want to defund public schools to privatize them, but they want teachers to be prepared to take on a shooter with an AR-15? Just who the fuck is this moron?
The Lake Havasu City Republican championed a measure this year that allocated $10 million for a safety pilot program that schools and teachers could opt into, which includes lessons on threat assessment, firearm safety and combat medical care. [Now he expects underpaid teachers to be combat medics as well?] The bill was widely panned by Democrats, who criticized it as overburdening teachers when the focus should be on restricting gun access.
GOP lawmakers also introduced and unanimously backed a proposal to require schools to teach students a course on firearm safety, which drew backlash from gun violence advocates who pointed out its similarity to National Rifle Association talking points. Another bill, sent to the governor’s office on Wednesday with only Republicans in favor, would decriminalize carrying firearms on school grounds if the carrier is a parent with a concealed gun permit.
Yeah, like there are no crazy parents with a gun walking around who would shoot up a school. “C’mon in!”
Students react
Michael-Anthony Rodriguez, a high school student from Eloy, showed up at the Capitol with social justice group Rural Arizona Action to express his disapproval of the push for more SROs. Schools need greater overall funding, especially in rural communities like his, he said, and focusing resources on such a small part of the school environment is disingenuous.
“I feel like they’re trying to put a Band-Aid on a situation instead of actually fixing what the root problem is,” he said.
Rodriguez’s school, Santa Cruz Valley High, has bathrooms in disrepair — some stalls don’t even have doors — and teachers are leaving due to low pay, including a popular teacher who commuted from Tucson but recently resigned because he could no longer afford to make the trip.
“It kind of feels like our community has always been impoverished,” he said. “And because our school lacks funding, it lacks opportunities for kids.”
Samual Kahrs noted that a majority of school shooters gain access to firearms via their families, and said adding even more guns to school campuses via SROs doesn’t help. As much as 74% of school shooters used guns obtained from parents, family members or friends. And teen access to firearms has spiked since the pandemic, with gun sale increases resulting in one-third of all homes with children under 18 now having at least one gun.
Safety is often on the 17-year-old’s mind, because many of his classmates have shared that their families keep guns at home or they themselves have one in their cars. State law allows unloaded guns to be kept in a locked car as long as they are out of sight when visiting a school campus. Lawmakers, Kahrs said, should shift their focus to address gun safety at home, where the issue often arises first.
“We shouldn’t be putting more guns into our schools,“ Kahrs said. “Legislators need to stop pushing to spend what little education money we have on resource officers and they need to spend their time making policies that restrict people’s ability to get access to these weapons of mass murder, as well as legislation that requires safety checks and gun safes.”
A Democratic proposal seeking to require gun owners to lock away their ammunition, firearms or both in a storage container when not being carried was rebuffed by the Republican-majority, which refused to give it a hearing.
Like I said, Republicans are more interested in protecting gun manufacturers and the gun culture. This is why they obstruct every responsible gun control and background checks, and scoff at the idea of an assault weapons ban.
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Meanwhile, the GOP idiots in Tennessee double down…
Rep. Justin Jones
@brotherjones_
Today on the House floor, we’ll be voting on HB 1202 to allow teachers to carry guns in schools. Is this really the direction we want to go as a state— more guns in schools? This is an irresponsible response to school shootings and will not keep students safe. This is madness.
6:37 AM · Apr 17, 2023
Yep, we can simply combat school violence with more SROs just like we can simply repair a broken water main with a wad of chewing gum. The GOP will never, ever address the real root cause of any issue and, whenever possible, will continue to switch the blame, then switch the blame again. It’s the world’s biggest shell game.
The Louisville coward killed 5 adults in 60 seconds with an armed guard on hand. The only solution is to arm everyone in schools including teachers, administrators, custodians, kids and, especially, the hamsters in the biology lab. Of course, we don’t want untrained people wielding guns so everyone will be required to spend 3 hours per day on the range, immediately after 3 hours of bible study. Any time left will be devoted to sending “thots & pears” to other victims.
Can’t feed the school-to-prison pipeline if there aren’t cops there to escalate problems.