I think this needs to be a major tool in our anti-2A-fixing toolbox. So much so, that I'm actually going to give it its own thread.
I ran across this by accident and have never seen it again in research. Most of the time when you look up "school shootings" or the like, you get Virginia Tech, Columbine, etc. you won't find a mention of it. Why? Because shootings are the only thing on the media's plate. It's like they think such disasters are sexy.
In 1927, a school board treasurer became enraged at some taxes which would possibly hurt his farm. He flipped and decided to get even... or something. In the end, he would kill 38 children, two teachers, and four first-responders.
His method? He dynamited the school. When people showed up to help, he drove his truck up and blew it up again, killing himself, more children, and more adults.
Banning firearms will not solve our problems. You don't need a gun to commit mass murder. There is something really broken in us. What is it? I'm not sure. Perhaps it is our confrontational and stressful society. One thing I'm pretty sure of? It isn't the ownership of firearms. If it were, we'd have had these mass shootings since semi-automatic firearms had been first made available, over 100 years ago.
I ran across this by accident and have never seen it again in research. Most of the time when you look up "school shootings" or the like, you get Virginia Tech, Columbine, etc. you won't find a mention of it. Why? Because shootings are the only thing on the media's plate. It's like they think such disasters are sexy.
In 1927, a school board treasurer became enraged at some taxes which would possibly hurt his farm. He flipped and decided to get even... or something. In the end, he would kill 38 children, two teachers, and four first-responders.
His method? He dynamited the school. When people showed up to help, he drove his truck up and blew it up again, killing himself, more children, and more adults.
Banning firearms will not solve our problems. You don't need a gun to commit mass murder. There is something really broken in us. What is it? I'm not sure. Perhaps it is our confrontational and stressful society. One thing I'm pretty sure of? It isn't the ownership of firearms. If it were, we'd have had these mass shootings since semi-automatic firearms had been first made available, over 100 years ago.

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