President Trump Pushes Armed Teachers to End School Attacks

President Trump Pushes Armed Teachers to End School Attacks



During the meeting with Parkland students at the White House on Wednesday President Trump said arming teachers is a step that can be taken to make schools less-attractive targets for attackers.

He said that as things stand, attackers have nothing to lose because no one can shoot back.

CNN quoted Trump saying, “Gun-free zone to a maniac—because they’re all cowards—a gun-free zone is ‘let’s go in and let’s attack because bullets aren’t coming back at us.’” He said adopting a policy where “20 percent” of teachers were armed would reduce or eliminate the perception of weakness, making schools a riskier target to strike.

Trump said, “If you had a teacher who was adept with the firearm, they could end the attack very quickly.”

Newsweek reports that Trump also emphasized mental health and raising “the minimum age for purchasing a firearm,” but the push for arming teachers took center stage.

Students showed considerable support for the idea of arming teachers. Hunter Pollack, who lost his sister Meadow in the attack, said, “I’m not here to debate, but I lost my sister. And like Mr. President said, if you could find 20% of maybe retired law enforcement officers, or a teacher who could go through discreet training to carry a firearm around his waist, it could’ve been a very different situation.”

President Trump campaigned on allowing teachers to be armed for self-defense. He said gun-free zones provide “target practice for sickos” and, on October 8, 2016, the Washington Post quoted him saying, “I will get rid of gun-free zones on schools.”

AWR Hawkins is an award-winning Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News, the host of the Breitbart podcast Bullets with AWR Hawkins, and the writer/curator of Down Range with AWR Hawkins, a weekly newsletter focused on all things Second Amendment, also for Breitbart News. He is the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com. Sign up to get Down Range at breitbart.com/downrange.

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WATCH: CNN Legal Analyst Lies About Trump’s Proposal To Arm Teachers

On Wednesday, CNN “legal analyst” Jeffrey Toobin decided to attack the idea of giving school teachers guns by lying about President Trump’s position.

Trump said Wednesday one idea to help mitigate school shootings would be to give 20% of teachers guns. He said, “So let’s say you had 20 percent of your teaching force, because that’s pretty much the number. If you had a teacher who was adept at firearms they could very well end the attack very quickly.”

Toobin decided to use his own hysteria and hyperbole to exaggerate what Trump had said, asserting that Trump had said to arm every school teacher with a gun. He snapped:

I’m pro-rancor. I’m pro-vitriol. I am pro-someone doing something about this, rather than being polite when you hear the president of the United States say the answer is to give every teacher in America a gun. That is insane. That is an insane idea.

Trump said nothing of the sort, but this is CNN, so . . .

Toobin continued hyperventilating:

As Mark Barden, one of the fathers, who lost a child in Sandy Hook, whose wife is a teacher—I mean seriously did anybody go to school here? Does anybody remember their teachers? Do you think we should give all of them guns? I mean, do you think they want guns? What kind of country do we live in when we’re talking about giving every teacher in America a gun? And that’s a solution to this problem?”

CNN’s Dana Bash interrupted, “But the fact that you had two people stand up as part of this dialogue and say, “Mr. President,” — not the way Jeff just said it, but in a respectful, clear way —“really bad idea.” The fact that they were able to do that is really noteworthy.”

Toobin returned to ranting:

One of the great things about our country is that we do have freedom of speech and I’m glad it was exercised in the White House but for anybody to get their hopes up when we have an entire political party‑I mean, look at the vote yesterday in the Florida House of Representatives. Every Republican voted against this bill to limit assault weapons. I think it’s fabulous what these kids are doing. I think it’s intensely admirable. But the idea that we’re on the verge of some change—anybody remember the Million Mom March? Similarly impressive; nothing happened.

Video below:

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Andrew Pollack Father of Parkland Shooting Victim Makes Emotional Remarks at WH Listening Session: ‘I’m Pissed’

Wednesday at a White House listening session on school shootings, Andrew Pollack, who lost his daughter, Meadow at the Parkland, FL school shooting last week, called for cooperation to fix the schools.

Pollack said, “I’m here because my daughter has no voice. She was murdered last week and she was taken from us. Shot nine times on the third floor. We as a country failed our children. This shouldn’t happen. We go to the airport, I can’t get on a plane with a bottle of water, but we leave some animal to walk into a school and shoot our children. It is just not right.”

He continued, “We need to come together as a country, not different parties, and figure out how we protect the schools. It’s simple. It’s not difficult. We protect airports, we protect concerts, stadiums, embassies, the Department of Education that I walked in today that has a security guard in the elevator. How do you think that makes me feel?”

He added, “It should’ve been one school shooting, and we should’ve fixed it! And I’m pissed because my daughter I’m not going to see again. She is not here. She is not here. She’s at King David Cemetery, that’s where I go to see my kid now. It stops. And if we all work together and come up with the right idea, school safety. It is not about gun laws. That is another fight, another battle. Let’s fix the schools, and then you guys can battle it out whatever you want, but we need our children safe. Monday, tomorrow, whatever day it is, your kids go to school. Do you think everyone’s kids are safe? I didn’t think it was going to happen to me. If I knew that, I would have been at the school every day if I knew it was that dangerous. That is enough. Let’s get together, work with the president, and fix the schools. That’s it. No other discussions.”

Follow Pam Key on Twitter @pamkeyNEN

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‘Most Admired’ Billy Graham Praised by Pro-Life Leaders

‘Most Admired’ Billy Graham Praised by Pro-Life Leaders



National pro-life leaders are praising Christian evangelist Rev. Billy Graham as an example of “dignity, integrity and tireless courage” whose leadership was “essential for the survival of faith” itself.

Graham, who died Wednesday at the age of 99, appeared on Gallup’s “Most Admired” List 61 times, the polling company states:

The Rev. Billy Graham, the renowned Christian evangelist who died at age 99 on Wednesday, holds the remarkable distinction of having appeared on Gallup’s Top 10 “Most Admired Man” list 61 times, more than any other man since the annual listing began in 1948 — and more than any woman [who] has appeared on the companion Top 10 “Most Admired Woman” list.

Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America, said in a press statement that Graham “stands as an example of humble leadership, noteworthy for not only his scandal-free life, but for his consistency in calling for a life of faith and service.”

“He is an example for us all of dignity, integrity and tireless courage in communicating timeless truths with love and respect,” she added.

Father Frank Pavone, National Director of Priests for Life and president of the National Pro-Life Religious Council, said Graham “has touched more hearts and converted more souls than can ever be known. His accomplishments are too numerous to count but they all stem from his belief that people need to hear the Gospel.”

Pavone added that Graham’s ministry “not only enriched the Church,” but also “enriched America as a nation.”

“When we lose sight of the Creator, we lose sight of his creation, and forget fundamental truths like the sanctity of life, marriage, family and freedom,” he continued. “But when we see God clearly in Jesus Christ, we rediscover those truths.

Pavone said the work of evangelists like Graham “is not only essential for the survival of faith; it is essential for our survival itself.”

Dr. Alveda King, director of Civil Rights for the Unborn at Priests for Life, said Graham “has departed earth to receive A Warrior’s Reward.”

“Many will note the many contributions of the life and legacy of Dr. Billy Graham today in honor and recognition of this great Christian warrior who has reached millions of lives for Christ during his 99 years on earth,” she added.

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Student threatens to ‘shoot up’ his school – what police find at his home is chilling

California law enforcement authorities say they might have prevented a school shooting at El Camino High School after a student muttered that he was going to “shoot up” the campus.

Here’s what police discovered at his home

Here’s what happened

Police were called immediately after a seventeen-year-old student said that he was planning to “shoot up” the school and was overheard by a safety officer. During an investigation, they discovered a cache of weapons at his home.

Robert Jacobsen, the general counsel for the Norwalk-La Mirada Unified School District, said that the student made the comments after a disagreement with a teacher over headphones.

Marino Chavez, the safety officer, questioned the student about what he overheard him saying. After investigating the matter, the student said that he was simply joking.

“He did say that he was just kidding, he did not mean it. I said, ‘Well you can’t say those things on a school campus,’” Chavez said.

Chavez informed the police, who saw that an AR-15 was registered at the student’s address. When they investigated the home, they discovered several weapons, including two AR-15 rifles, two handguns and 90 high-capacity magazines.

The student’s older brother is an army veteran and said the weapons were his, but he was arrested and charged with several counts including “possession of an assault weapon, import of high-capacity magazines, and failure to register a personal handgun.

The student was also arrested for the threats he made.

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Open thread: The very fair and balanced “students stand up to evil gun owners” CNN town hall

Think I’m being snarky with the headline? The actual network-approved title of tonight’s event is “Stand Up: The Students of Stoneman Douglas Demand Action.” This is an advocacy event, not a “news program,” and they’re making no bones about it. I did some cursory googling this morning to see if CNN has ever hosted something so overtly biased towards one side’s position on a hot-button issue and came up empty. By comparison, the debate they hosted on taxes in November between Bernie Sanders and Maria Cantwell on one side and Ted Cruz and Tim Scott on the other was titled, prosaically, “The Fight Over Tax Reform.” They could have done that with this event too — “The Fight Over Guns,” “Americans On Guns,” whatever. But this isn’t a debate or a town hall in the proper sense, even though both sides will be represented. It’s a showcase for very sympathetic victims on one side but not, a la Steve Scalise, on the other. Maybe it’s better that they’re not pretending otherwise with a more anodyne title. There’s a little honesty in that.

The town hall begins at 9 p.m. ET. Here’s what CNN.com’s homepage looked like today for hours, as some high-school students in Florida left class to protest gun rights:

The small headline shunted off to the right side is about the sitting president ordering his attorney general to investigate the previous president, in case you can’t make it out beneath that “Man Walks On Moon”-sized banner.

As of 4:30 this afternoon, here’s what the left side of the homepage looked like:

You would think they’d squeeze something in there about Trump reportedly considering some gun-control proposals, which is potentially big news, but it would screw up the “good against evil” vibe and risk crowding out the bit about the student reading her poem, I guess.

Oh, here’s something else from the network Twitter account this afternoon:

When people like me complained about that, some dimwitted or disingenuous liberals squawked back that there’s nothing wrong with a news outlet reporting how legislators voted on a key proposal. It’s news! Indeed — but they don’t do that consistently on legislative votes, especially at the state level, do they? And they certainly don’t consistently match how a legislator voted to his or her grade from a key lobby group. That tweet isn’t being reported as news, it’s being reported exactly the way a PAC would flag a key vote for its donors in keeping a scorecard. It’s a directive on whom to oppose electorally, not a “news report.” A good point:

What’s the difference? Democrats voted against a majority of the public on the abortion proposal and had a strong financial incentive to do so. Both the abortion vote and the current gun-control push are framed explicitly in terms of saving children’s lives. Why did CNN key-vote the Florida gun vote but not the congressional abortion vote?

You know why. They’re entitled to be advocates if they want — God knows their competition is — but they’re not entitled to keep up the pretense that they’re the “neutral” network navigating between “Resistance” MSNBC and “state media” Fox. And in fairness to MSNBC, I’m not sure they’ve been any more biased than CNN has been over the last few days. CNN’s tilt is so egregious that I find myself checking my own bias in favor of gun rights as possibly distorting my judgment of how fair they’re being. I’m not wrong that everything I described above is ba-na-nas for an ostensibly impartial news outlet, right?

The X factor in the town hall is the host, Jake Tapper. Tapper is the one anchor left on CNN who seems to care about being viewed as neutral. Populists hate him for various reasons, partly because he’s critical of Trump, but I think any other CNN anchor in this role would be more likely to take the program into outright advocacy than he is. That’s not to say it won’t end up there anyway, though. Again, I refer you to the title of the event plus the fact that some juicy targets for gun-control fans will be part of the program, most notably Marco Rubio and Dana Loesch. A friend and I were debating earlier whether it made sense for them to show up or, given the biased nature of the event, more sense for them to boycott. He said boycott. I said that they should show up, partly to remind viewers that there’s another side to this, partly because it’s harder for gun-control fans to dehumanize the opposition when it’s in front of them, and partly to avoid embarrassing “MACHO GUN SUPPORTERS RUN FROM CHILDREN!” headlines. Which, rest assured, would have appeared as 800-pt banners on CNN.com tomorrow if Rubio and Loesch had bugged out. Anyway, here’s your thread to comment.

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Kris W. Kobach: It’s Time to Let Teachers Be Armed

The horrific February 14 school shooting in Parkland, Florida, has triggered the usual progressive drivel among Democrat politicians arguing for gun control.  It did not take Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy long to reach the Senate floor.

But we must face it: Banning any particular category of firearms would not have done a thing to stop a determined, mentally-unstable school shooter like Nikolas Cruz.  He was so determined, in fact, that he stated his intention to be a “professional school shooter” on YouTube.

And while we would hope that agents at the FBI would have the intellectual rigor to put two and two together, or at least respond to a tip dropped squarely in their laps, there will always be the possibility they will fail.  And while we would also hope that after responding to twenty calls involving the perpetrator over multiple years, local law enforcement would be able to do something, that is not always guaranteed either.  Relying on government agencies to stop a shooter in advance is a dangerous approach.  We should encourage law enforcement to try and prevent these incidents from occurring, but we would be foolish to think that that approach will always succeed.

When the government fails, as it so often does, the last line of defense is regular people with courage.  At that point, the only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.

There was one person who displayed extraordinary courage at the Florida high school.  Football coach Aaron Feis gave his life trying to shield students from the barrage of bullets.  But imagine how much more effective coach Feis could have been in protecting the lives of students if he had been armed.

The time has come for schools to allow willing teachers, coaches, and staff to be armed, provided they obtain a concealed carry permit and take appropriate training.

The school resource officers who are present at some schools are not enough.  The critical question in every scenario is, how long will it take for an armed defender to arrive at the scene?  The answer to this question is a matter of life and death.  If there are multiple armed teachers and staff in a school, then the response time can be reduced to seconds, rather than minutes.

This is not a new idea.  Indeed, laws in 18 states already permit teachers and/or staff to be armed in some circumstances, usually on terms that require the approval of the school board or superintendent.  They are Alabama, California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming.

The other 32 States should amend their laws to allow willing teachers and staff to be armed.  And those States that already permit teachers to carry need to revisit their laws to ensure that it is not too difficult for teachers who want approval to receive it.  That’s what Alabama is doing.  It should also be noted that in none of these states have there been any accidents or other negative consequences resulting from the policy of allowing teachers and staff to be armed.

The Florida Legislature is now considering a bill to join this list of States.  If only Florida had taken this step earlier.

Coach Feis demonstrated heroically that there are school personnel who are willing to take action to protect themselves and others.  It is time to let them do so with firearms.

Kris W. Kobach is the elected secretary of state of Kansas and a guest columnist for “Down Range with AWR Hawkins.”

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Columbine Victim’s Parent: We Need to Focus On Connectedness, Not Just Unity and Diversity

At President Donald Trump’s listening session featuring families of school shooting victims Wednesday, the father of a teenager killed in the Columbine High School shooting emphasized the importance of a culture of connectedness to prevent teen violence and suicides.

Darrell Scott opened by thanking Trump and Vice President Mike Pence and mentioned that he almost lost his son too in the Columbine massacre.

He told the room that the Scott family started a program called "Rachel’s Challenge" a year after their daughter died. They also worked on a program with Chuck Norris and his wife called "Kickstart for Kids" and other organizations to help youth.

"Our organization has reached over 28 million students in the past 19 years, and we have seen seven school shootings prevented, we see an average of three suicides prevented every single week of the year, over 150 a year," Scott said.

Scott showed off a book of letters from students that wanted to kill themselves and then shared a lesson he learned.

He then shared one principle that he says he learned while working with millions of people: "We must create a culture of connectedness."

"We must create a culture in which our classmates become our friends, and that is something we’ve learned to do over the years," Scott said.

Connectedness, Scott argued, is a missing piece of the conversation on mass shooters.

"Every single one of these school shootings has been from young men who have been disconnected. And we talk a lot about the mental health issues, but it actually goes deeper than this because there is a lot of mentally ill children that are kind and compassionate," Scott said.

"Because if you focus too much on diversity, you create division. If you focus on unity, you create compromise. But if you focus on relatedness, and how you relate with one another, then you can celebrate diversity and see unity take place," Scott added.

He says he’s come to this conclusion through his working with students.

"I’m all for diversity, all for unity but the focus really needs to be on how can we connect and that is something that we in our organizations have learned," Scott said.

Scott finished by saying that his work has taught him how to connect students with each other, their teachers, and their parents.

He said he would love to share more in the future and thanked the president for having the event.

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Cries to ‘Ban the AR-15’ Based on Ignorance and Hysteria

Yet another mass shooting has taken place in America – followed by all too predictable cries to ban the AR-15 rifle.


The pure ignorance of the people bleating for a ban on America’s most popular rifle is appalling. With few exceptions, most of the calls to ban the AR-15 come from liberal, urban women and metrosexual men whose knowledge of firearms comes entirely from watching Rambo movies or playing “Call of Duty.”



Even some in professional law enforcement know not of what they speak.  A local radio station interviewed a retired FBI agent who stated that he “could not understand” why people would want such a rifle.


I’ve shot service rifle competitions for nearly 20 years and held the classification of “Master” for nearly eleven.  I’ve probably put 20,000 rounds through AR-15 rifles.  Though I’ve never been in the military, I have more familiarity and proficiency with the weapon than most active-duty soldiers.  So I think I am as qualified as anybody to dispel the common myths about the AR-15.


First, the AR-15 is not a machine-gun or an “assault weapon.”  The AR-15 is a semi-automatic version of the M-16, which is a machine gun.  However, in Vietnam, the military found that troops with early versions of the M-16 were using fully-automatic “spray and pray” fire – and often failing to hit the enemy.  So when the M-16 was redesigned in the early 1980s, its fully automatic rate of fire was reduced to three-shot bursts, forcing troops to actually aim rather than hip-fire.  But any fully-automatic fire is simply not an option for the civilian AR-15.


Second, the idea that the AR-15 is some kind of horrifically powerful weapon is absurd.  In its most common chambering, the 5.56 NATO, the AR-15 is actually underpowered compared to traditional American battle rifles like the M1873 “Trapdoor” in .45-70 or the M1903 Springfield in .30-06.  The AR-15 is a .22-caliber centerfire.  When its M-16 counterpart was introduced in Vietnam, it was derided as a “mouse gun” and a “poodle-shooter.”  Many troops were dismayed when their .30-caliber M-14s were replaced with the new rifle.


Indeed, the M-16 and AR-15 rifle suffered a poor reputation for a couple of decades after its introduction in Vietnam, in part because ammunition issued by the Army resulted in malfunctions and jams, causing the deaths of a number of troops during firefights with the Viet Cong.


Like most technologies, however, the AR-15 has evolved significantly over time.  Its popularity today exists for a number of reasons.  The AR platform uses space-age materials, such as forged aluminum and plastic, which make it lightweight, durable, and weather-resistant.  Today’s AR-15 is reliable, ergonomic, and user-friendly.  It’s easy to maintain, and unlike traditional wood-stocked rifles, which often require custom fitting, it allows an infinite variety of aftermarket options and configurations without expensive professional gunsmithing.  To use an analogy that will be understandable to red-state males (but probably unfamiliar to urban blue-staters), the AR-15 has become the “small-block Chevy” of the shooting world.  Barrel assemblies (called “uppers”) can be switched out in ten seconds or less, and stocks can be easily customized to fit an individual shooter – such as a small-statured female.


Because of its inherent accuracy, the AR-15 has been a boon to target shooters, and its low recoil has enabled females to rank among the top competitors in the nation.  One female competitor scored two perfect “cleans” in the most difficult position – 200-yard standing – at the National Rifle Matches.  Such a feat would have been difficult to impossible with a .30-caliber bolt-action, the recoil of which can be literally teeth-rattling.


Third, those who contend that “no one goes hunting with an assault rifle” have betrayed the fact that they are probably not hunters themselves, or, if they are hunters, they’re decades out of date.  The modular nature of the AR-15 makes it easily adaptable for a variety of hunts in numerous calibers.  Short-barreled AR-15s in .450 Bushmaster or 7.62×39 have become the number-one choice for Southern hog-hunters, while Western prairie dog-hunters can install a 26″ “varmint” barrel in .204 Ruger or .223 Remington for unparalleled long-distance accuracy.  And calibers such as .223, .300 Blackout, and 6.8 SPC are perfect for Texas deer or medium-sized eastern whitetails.  The AR-15 platform is so ideally suited for hunting that in 2015, Remington, the oldest maker of sporting arms in the U.S., discontinued its inferior 7400/750 series of semi-automatics after sixty years in production.  The only semi-autos it manufactures for the hunting market today are AR platforms.  (By the way… nobody uses a 30-round magazine to hunt; most states limit capacity to four or five rounds while hunting.)


Banning the AR-15 to stop school shooters would be like banning Boeing 757s to stop terrorist attacks after 9/11.  You’ve never heard anyone say, “Nobody needs to fly through the air at 600 mph.  Look at how many people died because of those dangerous jetliners!”  Would liberal journalists, who advocate repealing the Second Amendment and banning guns, agree to a repeal of the First Amendment and impose a ban on computers, digital cameras, and video cameras because child pornographers use them?  I doubt it.


Banning AR-15s is not the answer to school shootings. Neither the Columbine killers nor Virginia Tech shooter Seung-Hui Cho, nor University of Texas shooter Charles Whitman, used AR-15s, and all of them managed to commit terrible crimes.


It would have been entirely possible in, say, 1875 to murder 17 schoolchildren with 19th-century technology, such as a brace of Colt revolvers and a Winchester lever-action rifle – or, for that matter, with a broadsword or double-bladed axe.  Why didn’t it happen then?  Probably a couple of reasons.  As the Supreme Court ruled in 1892, back then, the U.S. was a Christian nation.  It isn’t any longer, and today we’re dealing with the negative consequences of our 21st-century neo-paganism.  And back in 1875, children were not compelled under penalty of law to attend government schools (where self-defense is legally forbidden, ensuring that they will be sitting ducks) until late adolescence.


School shootings are absolutely unacceptable.  But banning modern firearms is equally unacceptable.  Nor would it be effective: Norway’s stringent gun control failed to stop Anders Breivik from killing 77 people; France’s ban on “assault weapons” didn’t stop the Bataclan shooters from killing 130; and Egypt’s rifle ban didn’t stop the massacre of 305 worshipers at a Sinai mosque last year.  Britain’s total confiscation of handguns and semi-automatic rifles failed to prevent Derrick Bird from shooting 23 people (12 fatally) with a bolt-action .22 in 2010.


In Federalist #10, James Madison warned us about the tyranny of the majority, in which a faction “united … by some common impulse of passion … adverse to the rights of other citizens” vies for power and control.  That is exactly what we are seeing today, with emotionally charged teenagers, skillfully manipulated and amplified by the liberal media, braying for a majority of the public to acquiesce to the  abridgment of the gun rights of the sane and the decent.


Sorry, I’m not buying it.  And anybody who does is a fool.


What we need instead is a cool-headed and sober analysis to find out why so many people, in the prime of life, in the wealthiest and most prosperous society in history, are willing to casually murder scores of strangers – and usually kill themselves in the process.


Until we answer that question, massacres are going to continue, with or without AR-15s.  So long as they do continue, the rest of us need all the self-protection – and freedom to defend ourselves – that we can get.










Yet another mass shooting has taken place in America – followed by all too predictable cries to ban the AR-15 rifle.


The pure ignorance of the people bleating for a ban on America’s most popular rifle is appalling. With few exceptions, most of the calls to ban the AR-15 come from liberal, urban women and metrosexual men whose knowledge of firearms comes entirely from watching Rambo movies or playing “Call of Duty.”


Even some in professional law enforcement know not of what they speak.  A local radio station interviewed a retired FBI agent who stated that he “could not understand” why people would want such a rifle.


I’ve shot service rifle competitions for nearly 20 years and held the classification of “Master” for nearly eleven.  I’ve probably put 20,000 rounds through AR-15 rifles.  Though I’ve never been in the military, I have more familiarity and proficiency with the weapon than most active-duty soldiers.  So I think I am as qualified as anybody to dispel the common myths about the AR-15.


First, the AR-15 is not a machine-gun or an “assault weapon.”  The AR-15 is a semi-automatic version of the M-16, which is a machine gun.  However, in Vietnam, the military found that troops with early versions of the M-16 were using fully-automatic “spray and pray” fire – and often failing to hit the enemy.  So when the M-16 was redesigned in the early 1980s, its fully automatic rate of fire was reduced to three-shot bursts, forcing troops to actually aim rather than hip-fire.  But any fully-automatic fire is simply not an option for the civilian AR-15.


Second, the idea that the AR-15 is some kind of horrifically powerful weapon is absurd.  In its most common chambering, the 5.56 NATO, the AR-15 is actually underpowered compared to traditional American battle rifles like the M1873 “Trapdoor” in .45-70 or the M1903 Springfield in .30-06.  The AR-15 is a .22-caliber centerfire.  When its M-16 counterpart was introduced in Vietnam, it was derided as a “mouse gun” and a “poodle-shooter.”  Many troops were dismayed when their .30-caliber M-14s were replaced with the new rifle.


Indeed, the M-16 and AR-15 rifle suffered a poor reputation for a couple of decades after its introduction in Vietnam, in part because ammunition issued by the Army resulted in malfunctions and jams, causing the deaths of a number of troops during firefights with the Viet Cong.


Like most technologies, however, the AR-15 has evolved significantly over time.  Its popularity today exists for a number of reasons.  The AR platform uses space-age materials, such as forged aluminum and plastic, which make it lightweight, durable, and weather-resistant.  Today’s AR-15 is reliable, ergonomic, and user-friendly.  It’s easy to maintain, and unlike traditional wood-stocked rifles, which often require custom fitting, it allows an infinite variety of aftermarket options and configurations without expensive professional gunsmithing.  To use an analogy that will be understandable to red-state males (but probably unfamiliar to urban blue-staters), the AR-15 has become the “small-block Chevy” of the shooting world.  Barrel assemblies (called “uppers”) can be switched out in ten seconds or less, and stocks can be easily customized to fit an individual shooter – such as a small-statured female.


Because of its inherent accuracy, the AR-15 has been a boon to target shooters, and its low recoil has enabled females to rank among the top competitors in the nation.  One female competitor scored two perfect “cleans” in the most difficult position – 200-yard standing – at the National Rifle Matches.  Such a feat would have been difficult to impossible with a .30-caliber bolt-action, the recoil of which can be literally teeth-rattling.


Third, those who contend that “no one goes hunting with an assault rifle” have betrayed the fact that they are probably not hunters themselves, or, if they are hunters, they’re decades out of date.  The modular nature of the AR-15 makes it easily adaptable for a variety of hunts in numerous calibers.  Short-barreled AR-15s in .450 Bushmaster or 7.62×39 have become the number-one choice for Southern hog-hunters, while Western prairie dog-hunters can install a 26″ “varmint” barrel in .204 Ruger or .223 Remington for unparalleled long-distance accuracy.  And calibers such as .223, .300 Blackout, and 6.8 SPC are perfect for Texas deer or medium-sized eastern whitetails.  The AR-15 platform is so ideally suited for hunting that in 2015, Remington, the oldest maker of sporting arms in the U.S., discontinued its inferior 7400/750 series of semi-automatics after sixty years in production.  The only semi-autos it manufactures for the hunting market today are AR platforms.  (By the way… nobody uses a 30-round magazine to hunt; most states limit capacity to four or five rounds while hunting.)


Banning the AR-15 to stop school shooters would be like banning Boeing 757s to stop terrorist attacks after 9/11.  You’ve never heard anyone say, “Nobody needs to fly through the air at 600 mph.  Look at how many people died because of those dangerous jetliners!”  Would liberal journalists, who advocate repealing the Second Amendment and banning guns, agree to a repeal of the First Amendment and impose a ban on computers, digital cameras, and video cameras because child pornographers use them?  I doubt it.


Banning AR-15s is not the answer to school shootings. Neither the Columbine killers nor Virginia Tech shooter Seung-Hui Cho, nor University of Texas shooter Charles Whitman, used AR-15s, and all of them managed to commit terrible crimes.


It would have been entirely possible in, say, 1875 to murder 17 schoolchildren with 19th-century technology, such as a brace of Colt revolvers and a Winchester lever-action rifle – or, for that matter, with a broadsword or double-bladed axe.  Why didn’t it happen then?  Probably a couple of reasons.  As the Supreme Court ruled in 1892, back then, the U.S. was a Christian nation.  It isn’t any longer, and today we’re dealing with the negative consequences of our 21st-century neo-paganism.  And back in 1875, children were not compelled under penalty of law to attend government schools (where self-defense is legally forbidden, ensuring that they will be sitting ducks) until late adolescence.


School shootings are absolutely unacceptable.  But banning modern firearms is equally unacceptable.  Nor would it be effective: Norway’s stringent gun control failed to stop Anders Breivik from killing 77 people; France’s ban on “assault weapons” didn’t stop the Bataclan shooters from killing 130; and Egypt’s rifle ban didn’t stop the massacre of 305 worshipers at a Sinai mosque last year.  Britain’s total confiscation of handguns and semi-automatic rifles failed to prevent Derrick Bird from shooting 23 people (12 fatally) with a bolt-action .22 in 2010.


In Federalist #10, James Madison warned us about the tyranny of the majority, in which a faction “united … by some common impulse of passion … adverse to the rights of other citizens” vies for power and control.  That is exactly what we are seeing today, with emotionally charged teenagers, skillfully manipulated and amplified by the liberal media, braying for a majority of the public to acquiesce to the  abridgment of the gun rights of the sane and the decent.


Sorry, I’m not buying it.  And anybody who does is a fool.


What we need instead is a cool-headed and sober analysis to find out why so many people, in the prime of life, in the wealthiest and most prosperous society in history, are willing to casually murder scores of strangers – and usually kill themselves in the process.


Until we answer that question, massacres are going to continue, with or without AR-15s.  So long as they do continue, the rest of us need all the self-protection – and freedom to defend ourselves – that we can get.





via American Thinker

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New hot ticket for Ohio teachers: free concealed carry classes

It all started with a tweet from the Sheriff of Butler County, Ohio, and it seemed like a simple enough idea. How about free concealed carry classes for teachers in public schools?

Gun control advocates probably view this as being rather tasteless in the wake of the Florida school shooting, but really… when would the correct time be? If the resources don’t exist to put armed security guards in all the schools, something needs to be done. But the question is, would teachers want to go for it? As reported by the local Fox News outlet, the demand for such classes may quickly outstrip the supply.

Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones said in a tweet Sunday training will be free.

Interest is so high, 250 teachers signed up in less than 24 hours, he said early Tuesday. “We have 250 and growing fast. We will start training fast, next week,” he said.

The outspoken sheriff said the time has come to arm educators. “I believe that school teachers should be taught how to deal with guns, when guns come to the classroom,” he said.

“What guns can do when they come to the classroom, and if the school boards want to give the authority to teachers to be armed. The school boards can do that, they have the authority to do it, but I’m going to do my part, and I assume I’m probably the only one in the state of Ohio that’s doing that – but something has to happen.”

Sheriff Jones has been both vocal and proactive on this subject all week. He previously sent letters to both Ohio Governor John Kasich and President Trump asking for their support in his initiatives. Basically, we’re looking at three different proposals, each of which deserves a quick look.

The first idea is arming teachers. As long as they’re interested in volunteering and not being forced to carry, that’s a solid plan providing the proper precautions are taken. In addition to basic safety and marksman training, you can’t risk a weapon getting loose in the school. Some students coming from unstable home situations or suffering from mental illness might see that as an opportunity to grab a firearm when they may not otherwise have access to one and start shooting. Teachers who carry need to keep direct control of their firearms at all times and be ready to prevent a student from forcibly taking it away. But with the right precautions in place, a teacher could put a rapid end to a mass shooting scenario.

The Sheriff’s next idea involves arming retired police and military veterans to guard schools. This is an opportunity for the community to step in and cover situations where the government can’t (or won’t) summon the resources to address a critical issue. Assuming willing volunteers are found, former military and law enforcement personnel are ideal choices, having already received professional firearms training and bringing the experience which comes with those careers.

The last idea being put forward by Jones is a bit more questionable, and that’s to end fire drills at schools. It’s understandable how some might consider this as a sort of gut reaction when you recall that the Florida school shooter pulled a fire alarm to get the students out in the hallways. But there doesn’t seem to be a practical purpose to it. First of all, fire drills are important so the kids know the procedure and the route to take in the event of an actual fire. Jones may be worried that students pouring outside during a drill make for easy targets, but the kids are already outside in large numbers every day at the beginning of school, the end of the day and probably at lunchtime as well. As long as the fire drills are held at random times, they don’t seem to present any significant, additional exposure.

All in all, Jones is clearly on to something. Everyone is yelling for someone to “do something” about school shootings, but there’s a limit to what the government can accomplish. If handled properly, the ideas the Sheriff is fielding could do more than any new package of legislation cooked up in Washington.

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via Hot Air

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