Teachers allowed guns in Texas schools

by Sanjay Jha | August 27, 2008 at 01:50 am
1249 views | 10 Recommendations | 2 comments

Adding security  woes in the schools, teachers in Texan country schools have permitted to carry gun in the class room.  This is the first time an elematary shcool has allowed such kind of thing. There has been many incidents of gun firing in schools all over USA

Teachers at a tiny Texas country school packed a gun along with their lesson plans when classes started this week.

The isolated, 110-student school near the border with Oklahoma is thought to be the first in the United States to allow guns in the classroom.

School officials say arming teachers is the only way to protect the old brick schoolhouse, which sits 30 minutes from the nearest police station.

"How do you stop the angry person without enough sense?" said Superintendent David Thweatt of the Harrold Independent School District.

"It's not going to take very long for it to be a total massacre."

But critics say the risks of having guns around children far outweigh the potential threat of a crazed gunman.

"Which risk is more likely: that someone is going to accidentally set off a gun in class and God forbid hit a student, or someone will come in off the highway and start a random shooting spree?" said Doug Pennington, spokesman for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.

While random shootings grab headlines, they are extremely rare, Pennington said, adding that fewer than one per cent of school-age homicide victims are killed on school grounds or on the way to and from school.

Pennington questioned whether teachers were adequately trained to respond in a crisis situation and said the school would be better off with a security guard -- the only people technically allowed to carry guns in Texas schools.

Thweatt would not say which teachers were armed or how many but said they all received adequate training.

Harrold's school board decided last October to allow its employees to carry concealed handguns on campus when the 2008-09 school year began on Monday.

Mass murders at schools, college campuses, shopping malls and churches have claimed scores of lives across the United States in recent years.

Some, like Harrold's superintendent, blame the violence on federal legislation enacted in 1995 that made such areas "gun-free zones."

"That's the place people could go if they are feeling crazy or mad at the world and get a big body count," Thweatt told.

Thweatt says he studied the issue for two years while he filled his school with more than 100,000 dollars in state-of-the-art security systems.

But even with the new keyless entry, camera system, lock-down buttons and classroom telephones, Thweatt said he still could not have prevented a mass murder like the one in an Amish one-room schoolhouse in Pennsylvania in 2006 that left five girls dead.

It also would not have been enough to deter the deranged student at Virginia Tech University, who killed 32 people and wounded 23 in 2007.

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Uwe Paschen
Uwe Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 01:56 on August 27th, 2008

Sanjay Jha, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Insanity!

0
Proud American

Johnny, you don't understand, because you don't live here.  When I was a kid we never had shootings in classrooms and churches.  Of course when I was a kid we didn't make a big fuss about guns either.  We also didn't have gangs like we do today.  These kids who are gang members do not care about teachers or kids.  I was a teacher until last year when a good friend of mine was paralyzed during class by a gangster.  He never had a chance, but if he had a gun, or the students didn't know whether he had one or not things might have been different.  We are not obsessed with guns by the way, that would be the media and liberal pansies that can't get their kicks any other way than imposing their beliefs on others. 

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