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Three fatal attacks on school
property in less than a week; more than 20 since February 1996 when a
14-year-old youth strolled into a junior high school in Moses Lake,
Wash. and opened fire, killing two students and a teacher.
The dirty little secret of all these atrocities is that they happened in
so-called “Gun Free School Zones.” Prior to the enactment of that
horribly misguided federal legislation and its state-level clones, one
never read about school massacres because there weren’t any. The Gun
Free School Zones Act transformed the public school landscape into a
free-fire zone for whackos by removing any possibility, however small,
that an armed teacher, student or private citizen might be present to
intervene. As a result, monsters like Colorado’s Duane Morrison or
Pennsylvania’s Charles Roberts, and a host of others have committed
mayhem, courtesy of gun control fanatics who pressured Congress and
state legislatures to pass such statutes.
The exception is Luke Woodham, who shot up Mississippi’s Pearl High
School in 1997 after slitting his mother’s throat. Midway through his
spree, Woodham encountered Vice Principal Joel Myrick, who had rushed to
his car to retrieve a .45-caliber pistol. Myrick aimed the gun at
Woodham’s head and held him until police arrived.
You read little about Myrick’s heroism, and less about his handgun, in
press reports.
After the Pennsylvania attack on an Amish school in Lancaster County,
anti-gun Gov. Ed Rendell had a remarkable moment of candor when he
admitted that tougher gun laws would not have stopped the gunman. “You
can make all the changes you want,” Rendell said, “but you can never
stop a random act of violence by someone intent on taking his own life.”
His remarks were largely ignored because nobody wants to admit that
Rendell is right about this, same as they overlooked Myrick and his gun.
Such facts don’t fit the anti-gun agenda.
It is time to re-consider gun-free school zone laws and the
zero-tolerance mentality such laws foster. Inflexible regulations aimed
at keeping kids safe also place teachers in jeopardy. A teacher in
Lacey, Wash. was recently suspended for having a gun in her purse.
Licensed to carry, she was afraid of her estranged husband, against whom
she has a domestic violence protection order, and has filed for divorce.
But now she’s in trouble; allegedly victimized by her spouse and again
by the law.
We can no longer afford the empty-headed Utopian illusion that such
statutes keep anyone safe, because they don’t. Like other restrictive
gun control measures, this one has been a monumental failure, and it is
literally killing our children.
Nobody is suggesting that all teachers arm themselves, but scrapping the
law restores that option. School massacres didn’t happen in the days
when high schools had rifle teams, and when it was common in the fall to
find both teachers and students with rifles or shotguns locked in their
cars. That was before “gun” became a four-letter word among
self-described “progressive liberals” who championed gun-free zones.
If what’s happening at schools today is “progress,” we might be better
off – and a lot of students would still be alive – if we were back in
those unenlightened days when school kids riding down country roads with
.22 rifles across their bicycle handlebars alarmed nobody.
In the wake of our most recent school shootings, reaction from the gun
control crowd has been pathetic. Brady Campaign President Paul Helmke
blustered that “we need to do something about that.” He suggested a
national dialogue, as if more talk will stop suicidal maniacs.
His bunch has done enough already, with the help of gun-grabbing
Congressional demagogues like Charles Schumer, Dianne Feinstein, Nancy
Pelosi and their far left colleagues, and an all-too-cooperative
“mainstream” press. They gave us a law that leaves our children and
their teachers vulnerable to the whims of any nutball looking for 15
minutes of fame because of real or imagined problems or perversions.
Restrictive gun laws do not prevent crime and the notion of a gun-free
school zone is a myth. More restrictions on law-abiding citizens will
never stop people like Morrison or Roberts who proved yet again that
feel-good laws have defrauded American citizens, and especially our
children, of genuine safety.
Alan Gottlieb is chairman of the Citizens Committee for the Right to
Keep and Bear Arms (www.ccrkba.org).
Dave Workman is the senior editor of Gun Week published by the Second
Amendment Foundation (www.saf.org).
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