Yes.would you want to be armed or unarmed??
Simple question. Please answer yes/no
Yes.would you want to be armed or unarmed??
Simple question. Please answer yes/no
But an armed teacher would have 'shot the hell out of him'... right?Four sheriff’s deputies hid during Florida school shooting
https://nypost.com/2018/02/23/four-sheriffs-deputies-hid-during-florida-school-shooting/
Two completely unrelated statements that do nothing to suggest armed teachers are the way to go.Teachers are intimately aware of their surroundings, including the floor plan of the school, and local contingencies should something happen. Do you actually think that the crazy with the gun is going to wait for the SWAT team to arrive before starting to execute everybody in sight? ....
That's simple.The side issue is funding. The US education system faces severe funding issues in may jurisdictions. Where will they find the money to pay for the training and salary incentives Trump has suggested?
Wait. I thought you said it was circumcision. No it was the lack of father figures. No wait, it's drugs given to frogs.
Some teachers love their kids and could be more motivated than cops...you never know...But an armed teacher would have 'shot the hell out of him'... right?
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/trump-armed-teacher-would-ve-shot-hell-out-florida-gunman-n850666
I assume this means you trust teachers are 100% reliable and competent.Okay, but lets say you're a teacher in the US right now, and your school is getting shot up by a shooter, would you want to be armed or unarmed??
Simple question. Please answer yes/no
Here we go again. People seem to be obsessed with the notion that ordinary folks can't be trained properly in the handling of firearms, and that Trump's proposal is to just hand them over like that, no training.Arming people without proper training is not really all that useful. I really doubt the schools are providing weekly target practice for those teachers..... which is what is required to stay sharp and combat ready.
Do you actually think the average cop is proficient? What nonsense.Here we go again. People seem to be obsessed with the notion that ordinary folks can't be trained properly in the handling of firearms, and that Trump's proposal is to just hand them over like that, no training.
Get this into your thick skulls: Concealed Carry and Trump's proposal requires training by law, and it's not just putting bullets in the centre of a target. It's what's legal and what's not and when it's time or not the time to engage.
You don't need weekly target practice in order to be proficient. do you actually think that the average cop shoots every week? What nonsense; they shoot once a year. Is this a reflection on you? Maybe you don't trust yourself with a firearm.... so don't get one, nobody is forcing you. But that doesn't mean that everybody else is as clumsy as you allude to be. Did you ever shoot a handgun before?
This attitude reflects the nanny state, where citizens are totally reliant on the government to maintain their well being. The idiocy goes to the point where people are unwilling to defend themselves against mortal danger in order to uphold that stupid notion that the police is going to take care of everything. And when it happens for real, they bleet 'why? why? why? as they realise that the nanny state is not real.
It's because there are bad people out there who don't care to sing Kumbaya with you before they rape your wife and blow your brains out..... especially in the violent society that is the US, and especilly in inner cities where poor people are by far the victims of gun crime.
And you assume that the police are always 100% reliable and competent?I assume this means you trust teachers are 100% reliable and competent.
Of course they can. The question is whether there is a mechanism to arm only the teachers whop are capable in a crisis situation and more importantly, who is going to pay for it. There are enough school districts in the states that struggle to find capable teachers for the pittance they pay, let alone capable teachers who are also capable as a crisis team.Here we go again. People seem to be obsessed with the notion that ordinary folks can't be trained properly in the handling of firearms, ...
Of course not, even with police training focusing a significant amount of time on guns and dealing with a crisis. And that is exactly the point. If police can't guarantee ability on part of their primary job responsibility (and at least 4 seem to have failed in this case), how would you expect teachers to sufficiently capable in both their actual job and being a substitute cop?And you assume that the police are always 100% reliable and competent?
You ignore the vetting that has to take place, the volunteers who step forward, and the training they will receive. ...
The average cop is never 100% proficient. But it doesn't mean that they are incompetent. Proficiency is not black and white. You achieve an acceptable level of proficiency. More to the point, you lose proficiency over time. You raise your proficiency by periodic training. Most police forces accept, within bugetary limitations, that training once a year is sufficient to maintain an acceptable level of proficiency. 'Acceptable' doesn't mean 100%, any more than getting less than 100% on your school exam means you flunk.Do you actually think the average cop is proficient? What nonsense.
If you do ANYTHING only once a year, you are NOT proficient.
Cops do a lot more than shoot guns. They uphold the law, and all of the laws. The duty of a volunteer who is armed is very narrow, and doesn't need the training that the cop gets, because most of it is irrelevant. Self defense and the protection of others in the immediate until help arrives is the only thing they have to focus on.Of course not, even with police training focusing a significant amount of time on guns and dealing with a crisis. And that is exactly the point. If police can't guarantee ability on part of their primary job responsibility (and at least 4 seem to have failed in this case), how would you expect teachers to sufficiently capable in both their actual job and being a substitute cop?
First, these shooters don't care if they are gun free zones or not. Do you not think that this guy knew that there was an armed deputy assigned to that school? It was HIS school.The average cop is never 100% proficient. But it doesn't mean that they are incompetent. Proficiency is not black and white. You achieve an acceptable level of proficiency. More to the point, you lose proficiency over time. You raise your proficiency by periodic training. Most police forces accept, within bugetary limitations, that training once a year is sufficient to maintain an acceptable level of proficiency. 'Acceptable' doesn't mean 100%, any more than getting less than 100% on your school exam means you flunk.
But why is it that some people believe that teachers (in this case) have to be more proficient (100%) than the cops who are supposed to instantly be there to protect them?
They also ignore the deterrence effect where certain schools are not gun-free zones anymore. That means to a potential aggressor, somebody may shoot back. Whether there are 2 or 50 teachers who are armed, or whether they are all super proficient or barely, how is a potential aggressior to know anyway.
First, you need volunteers who are willing to take the training. Usually, those who volunteer show some initiative and some skill in the first place.Of course they can. The question is whether there is a mechanism to arm only the teachers whop are capable in a crisis situation and more importantly, who is going to pay for it. There are enough school districts in the states that struggle to find capable teachers for the pittance they pay, let alone capable teachers who are also capable as a crisis team.
Teachers do a lot more than shoot guns.Cops do a lot more than shoot guns.
Lots of hyperbole and lots of nonsense. Do I have to go through every specific point?First, these shooters don't care if they are gun free zones or not. Do you not think that this guy knew that there was an armed deputy assigned to that school? It was HIS school.
Also, you seem to ignore the fact that teachers become teachers because they want to be teachers. They don't want to be law enforcement, paramilitary, military, mercenaries... they want to be teachers.
Additionally, in an environment where many, if not most teachers actually buy class supplies out of their own pocket... where do you suggest the money comes from to: train (initially and ongoing) said teachers, give them a salary increase (because now they have a new skillset and more responsibility), pay for increased insurance premiums (because insurers LOVE having armed people walking around their liabilities), increased medical premiums for teachers who are too stressed out because they are carrying a gun all day, increased disability payments for teachers who can no longer work because of the stress of carrying a gun and/or the trauma of being in a situation and feeling like they have been forced to play superhero. Where is that money going to come from?
No, you're right. Unarmed people are so much more usefulArming people without proper training is not really all that useful