Posted on Feb 15, 2018
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Why do you think there are so many school shootings now as opposed to say 25 to 30 years ago? We all know that guns can’t shoot themselves, so obviously that is not the problem in my opinion. I honestly believe that there is a direct correlation between the rise of school shootings and the taking of God out of the classroom, and kids not getting a well deserved a** whooping. Thoughts on this?
Posted in these groups: Activeshooter Active ShooterOriginal Crime
Edited 8 y ago
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MSgt Darren VanDerwilt
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Has anyone brought up the over prescribing of psychotropic medications within the public schools? Also, how often do these shootings take place in parochial or private versus public schools? Boys in particular are routinely threatened with discipline, simply for being boys. Educators seem more interested in teaching LGBTQ...XYZ, gender identity, Islam, Climate Change "science," and other forms of indoctrination, than useful skills.
Also, seems these significant news events always occur shortly after the release of damning evidence against Democrats.
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MSgt Darren VanDerwilt
MSgt Darren VanDerwilt
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What 100 school shootings before Charles Whitman's 1966 shooting spree are you referring to? Incidentally, he had something in common with every other spree killer, mental instability. The original post regards current events, last 20 years, which would include the Columbine massacre. It has been noted as fact that mood altering medications were prescribed and used by spree killers at some point before their rampages. The point, in regards to leftist ideological dogma, is these issues do not fall into what schools are supposed to be teaching (reading, writing, arithmetic, history, and critical thought). They are a diversion.
The notion that there's been hundreds of school shootings is based on highly suspect, and disingenuous, data metric gathering standards. Much like classifying a hanging suicide as firearms related because police found an unloaded handgun in a nearby dresser drawer.
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SGT Retired
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Respectfully, apparently history isn’t big on the agenda, either. I won’t insult you by listing all 100+, but here are just a few:
Morey Junior High School, 1961. 2 killed.
William Reed School, 1960. 3 killed. (Principal was the shooter)
Alexander School, 1951. 2 killed.
Williams College, 1936. 2 killed, 1 injured.
Parson Hill School House, 1891. 14 injured.

Highly suspect? People were shot and killed/injured at school or at a school event. Furthermore, school is simply supposed to be teaching. But Im guessing you would prefer rightist, ideological dogma.

Of course, reading, writing and arithmetic are pretty much no-brainers. But the original post, as you point out, only asks about the last few decades. That would indicate a lack of understanding of history and context about the nature of school shootings, or spree shootings in general. Your response would indicate the same.

Our children should be as well educated as possible. On as many topics as possible. As I wrote previously, ignorance breeds violence. The irony of the explosion of the access to mass information for the majority of people (really, starting with television and then the development of the internet) is that it has made our society far more ignorant, as a whole.
It’s easy to cherry pick the information you consume (don’t like it, change the channel/web page). And people confuse the consumption of more information with the acquisition of knowledge.
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MSgt Darren VanDerwilt
MSgt Darren VanDerwilt
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Very interesting. I found the list. Noteworthy point, most, if not all, involved an escalation of an argument, revenge, and cases of jilted lovers (both student and faculty). Similar to the recent statistics, relative information is sparse in some cases. Historical facts can be a troubling thing. Depending on source, and who's repeating it, the truth gets blurred.
Your short list has inconsistencies compared to the list I found. For example, there was one student killed, not two, in the Morey Junior High School incident. (October 17, 1961 Denver, Colorado Tennyson Beard, 14, got into an argument with William Hachmeister, 15, at Morey Junior High School. During the argument Beard pulled out a .38 caliber revolver and shot at Hachmeister, wounding him. A stray bullet also struck Deborah Faith Humphrey, 14, who died from her gunshot wound.) Here's the link: https://www.k12academics.com/school-shootings/history-school-shootings-united-states
There's a few items that are interesting to note within this list.
1. The majority of attacks during this time period (1800's) by students on other students or teacher, usually involved stabbing with knives, or hitting with stones.
2. There are very seldom reports of mass or multiple school shootings during the first three decades of the 20th Century, with the three most violent attacks on schools involving either arson or explosions.
To clarify a point, I'm advocating that the public schools shouldn't be pushing any agenda, left or right.
Now for the main part. The original post seemingly advocates a need for further controls to firearms access. Noteworthy though, is how, after increased measures to limit firearms form schools, little has been affected. This is like noticing your cars' oil gauge fluctuating. You check the oil level, notice it's at the lower part of the indicator on the dipstick, so you add oil. But the oil gauge still fluctuates. The logical person looks at a possible bad oil pump. The gun control advocate consistently adds more oil, never solving the root cause of the problem.
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SGT Retired
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Excellent point. With the morey junior high shooting, it looks like I misread the news paper. Apologies. See link:
https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=PAozAAAAIBAJ&pg=4617,710365

While I haven’t previously seen this particular list, it too, has some peculiarities. It mentions that most attacks were were stabbing or stories. But it really only lists shootings. Also, it mentions that the worst attacks were arson or explosions. Interesting. (Let’s hope our kids don’t graduate from shootings to making HME and planting’s IEDs). Regardless, this could simply mean that they used what was available to them. Put those same people in our society today, and they’d use ARs. Put our modern rampage shooters in that era, and they would simply use knives, stones or arson.

Now, for the main part. The main post had nothing to do with advocating for gun control. He posted, “We all know that guns can’t shoot themselves, so obviously that is not the problem in my opinion. I honestly believe that there is a direct correlation between the rise of school shootings and the taking of God out of the classroom, and kids not getting a well deserved a** whooping”.

It seems the main post advocated more of a religious ideology being taught in schools. As if that would somehow alleviate school shootings. As if there is a correlation to taking god out of the classroom and school shootings going up.

My point is that there has always been and will continue to be violence. Even in schools. In response to your thoughts, I originally brought up that Jefferson was a proponent of Islam and certainly didn’t fear it. (Which you’ve not responded to). Fear breeds ignorance. And ignorance breeds violence. I’ve repeatedly stated that despite having access that the collective knowledge of the history of the world, our society is becoming increasingly fearful, thus increasingly ignorant, thus increasingly violent.

I don’t support more gun control. Getting rid of pencils won’t eliminate spelling errors, right? I do, however, advocate more education and knowledge. And when you write, “...LGBTQ...XYZ, gender identity, Islam, Climate Change "science," and other forms of indoctrination”, it indicates that you don’t view those as legitimate topics. Which is unfortunate.

Because understanding the science of climate change is more important than having god in the class room. Understanding Islam (which is different than being indoctrinated. But there are over a billion Muslims in the world. It’s a good idea to know about them) is probably important. Not understanding Islam is one of the reasons we’ve been fighting (almost to a standstillat this point) for decades.

Knowledge. Education. If even to debate the side you’re arguing against, it’s better to know about something than not know. Again, fear breeds ignorance. Ignorance breeds violence.
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CPT Jack Durish
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Forgive me, but I'm going to double-dip on this discussion thread and provide a second response. It fits with my first response wherein I described some of the potential contributing factors. However, as I read more about this latest shooting, I discovered one I didn't mention. It appears that the shooter in this most recent incident has possibly fallen under the pall of terrorists. As someone famous famously said, "When you don't stand for something, you'll fall for anything." Well, in recent years both the popular and news media has been attacking traditional American values. Activists have attacked the teaching of traditional values in our schools and other public places. Parents have abandoned traditional family values.

Interestingly, I once read that the children of Jews were most likely to fall under the pall of cults because Jewish parents hid their religion out of fear of reprisal. Their children were thus open to the siren song of the cults. Is it possible that we see the same thing playing out among other American families who have abandoned traditional values? Have terrorists organizations taken up the role that religious cults once played?

http://www.bizpacreview.com/2018/02/14/scumbag-shooter-bizarre-instagram-602708
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PO3 John Wagner
PO3 John Wagner
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Perfectly valid and no doubt accurate observation Jack.
It reminds me of a couple of X-files episodes where that very phenomenon was observed. Kids want to belong to something. There are those out there who will fill the void.
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SMSgt Keith Klug
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Because today's kids don't grow up, they just grow old.
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LTC Multifunctional Logistician
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Why do we not see shooters attack hard targets?
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MSG Charles Turner
MSG Charles Turner
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Sir,

Just my OPINION of course BUT; I believe, not as the media states, but a more realistic idea that "They are not as mentally ill" as many in media portray but This is direct action for the left to take over our society. When we have mothers and fathers claiming that their son or daughter should not have been SHOT while they were Robbing (or committing any crime with a weapon) we are sending more of that message that OUR RIGHTS as Law Abiding Citizens are Less (or dont even exist) when compared to select Criminals. Is this what we are to believe?
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Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D.
Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D.
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The clue was in your question: "hard targets." i couldn't resist. In fact, it follows an axiom (at least when sanity is in charge) of trying to infiltrate enemy lines: go around where they are are going to shoot back. Of course,if they are too lazy to shoot or unwilling to protect the target as happened with "cowardly law enforcement" (my choice of words) walk right on in!
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PO1 Chad Alcock
PO1 Chad Alcock
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MSG Charles Turner - One of the things I see is the prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishment". Did that person committing the crime take into account how their actions were going to affect the victim? I agree that there are many times that the "law" seems to be more worried about the rights of the criminal than the rights of the victim. I believe due process should take it's course, but when everything settles, it should be the person in the wrong that gets punished. Also Have you ever noticed that most times when some one gets in trouble, it's never their fault?
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CPT Intelligence Analyst
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Specialist - Its a lot of things that have created a storm and frienzy in society today. Read the other posts here. People are told they are special and different from day one. Trophies for everyone, everyone is a winner. The cold, hard truth is that failure, rejection, and loss are as real as anything else. People can't cope now. Society has tried to shield people from these facts and it has created weak people, both mentally and physically. Discipline, both from parental upbriniging, and in the school house, is needed to stop stuff like this from happening.
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MSG Charles Turner
MSG Charles Turner
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Sir, Very good response.

~ole Sarge~
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CW5 John M.
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Systemic Moral decline brought about by our national institutions, government, and many churches embracing secular humanism over our Judeo-Christian roots. Get ready, we have (sadly) a further ways to go....... before we - and the world - reach rock-bottom.
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SGT Eric Davis
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These kids these days have no discipline and morals; I just don’t blame the parents but I blame society too cause they took away religion in school, took away the teachers or educators power to discipline the children in school. These kids think everything should be handed to them and when you say no to something they get in a rage cause that’s what they aren’t use to hearing.
A parent can teach their child everything right but society and the will teach them everything else. I’m from the city where school shooting first started happening in the 90’s and from then on it got worst.


The sad part about the shooting is we can really stop them if they injury 1 student or kill 20 we can’t stop them cause school are public and no behind a wall all the time. Since I been a police officer people always ask why the police Wasn’t there but we can’t be everywhere. If I’m on one side of the building then who on the other side?

We need to bring back discipline and get rid of these electronics devices and actually talk and teach out youths!
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MSG Charles Turner
MSG Charles Turner
8 y
SGT,

I think society is what "WE" allow it to be or make it. Comes back to us....

It is quite simple .. WE KNOW IT IS WRONG, WE COMPLAIN BUT DO LITTLE OR NOTHING TO CHANGE IT.... It is our fault.

~ole Sarge~
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SFC Motor Transport Operator
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Kids are bored, no discipline, playing grand theft auto and shit thinking i can do that too !!! and go off and shoot up the place. A huge portion of our society is on line now and no one saw the red flaggs around that dude ? If you see somethig say something !!!! This stuff right there is gonna force me to home school my child and as much as i would prefer public or private school systems, i just dont trust that they will keep my child safe. Its geting rediculous, how the F**k some one can get a darn rifle at one age and a pistol at another age ? Our law makers need step in and make drastic law changes or we will continue to see this typo of tragedies and it needs to stop TIME NOW !!!
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PO3 Purchasing Manager
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LCDR (Join to see) - I agree, that it is a confusing mess and if we could decide on one age of majority across the board that would be nice.
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SFC Motor Transport Operator
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LCDR (Join to see) - I grew up in Poland and back then our adult age was 18, not sure how it is now but either way, the behavior of todays youths and overall personalities, maturity levels are changing so I don't think we can afford to call adulthood here in US at 18, it should be 21 years old. Same goes to teen driving and alcohol consumption oh and tobacco.
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PO3 John Wagner
PO3 John Wagner
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SFC (Join to see) - Major Ivan Raiklin just sent me a message today detailing his run for US senate from Virginia.
So, there's one of us running for office... and running 22 miles per day he says.
Well, that's a lot of time too think I suppose.
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SFC Motor Transport Operator
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Good, hopefully more will follow.
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1LT Cadet
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I think it is a combination of Godlessness, desensitization of death, the destruction of the values of an intact family, and liberal agenda. But I could be biased (of course)
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MSgt Steven Holt, NRP, CCEMT-P
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I don't think the issue can be distilled down to a "this is the reason why" situation. There are myriad reasons why the culture is so much different today. We can point to the removal of God, the Pledge, and respect for authority (teachers) from the classroom. We can also point to the breakdown of the family unit, tolerance of alternative lifestyles, political correctness, social media, moral decline, and "everyone is a winner" mentalities. It's just my opinion but I believe ALL of these play a part in the disintegration of society. We've removed the consequences of our actions and told our children that "hey, as long as YOU feel good it's OK". We've failed to teach our youth the value of life (human and otherwise). Let's not overlook the media's role in all of this as well. They've dramatized, sensationalized, and over-hyped each incident to the point these individuals are seeing similar events as their chance at immortal fame.

I don't have the answers. If I did, I would probably be sitting at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave instead of grinding out a meager living in the foothills of the Smokies.
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SMSgt Personnel
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Agree....many factors to consider!
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