So, protect the schools, but ignore the other places where innocent people are being attacked?
Mass shooters have hit theaters, malls, first responders, private residences, etc. If we’re going to protect the public, we have to protect them all, and the only suggestion from gun right advocates so far it placing guards at school.
Teachers are a special case because children, for the most part, are unable to defend themselves.
Why is there a resistance to stricter registration, and requiring documentation of all sales including private sales?
Do you want the government to know all your private information?
Why is there a resistance to a gun buyer disclosing mental health problems for everyone in the household, that may have an access to the gun?
There is no evidence that says a person with a mental illness is going to commit mass murder.
Why is there a resistance to a gun buyer disclosing members of the household with a criminal history, that may have access to a gun?
Because in this country you cannot punish a person for crimes committed by someone else.
Why is there a resistance to requiring guns, not in use, to be stored in a gun safe?
If you own a gun for personal protection, it doesn’t do you much good if you can’t get to it quickly is someone is breaking into your house and threatening you.
Why is there resistance to smaller magazines?
I don’t know about you, but if someone means to do me harm and I have to defend myself, I want MORE ammunition at my disposal; not less.
Why is there a resistance to insuring guns?
Not sure what you mean by that, but my guns are insured just like all my other personal property.
Why is the only solution offered to put more guards in one location of an attack and not all the places we see attacks happen? It seems to minimize the problem, in my opinion.
No one is saying we should only arm teachers. There is no reason we can’t arm anyone who feels they need to protect themselves or others. The answer to gun crime is not to limit guns; it is to enable people to better protect themselves.
You may have heard this story, but it bears repeating. In 1982, the Kennesaw, Georgia, City Council unanimously passed a law requiring heads of households to own at least one firearm with ammunition. The ordinance states the gun law is needed to “protect the safety, security and general welfare of the city and its inhabitants.”
Then-councilman J.O. Stephenson said after the ordinance was passed, everyone “went crazy.” “People all over the country said there would be shootings in the street and violence in homes,” he said. “Of course, that wasn’t the case.”
In fact, according to Stephenson, it caused the crime rate in the city to plunge.
Kennesaw Historical Society president Robert Jones said following the law’s passage, the crime rate dropped 89 percent in the city, compared to the modest 10 percent drop statewide.
And it has remained that way for the 30 years since the law was passed.