When I was working at a 7-11 a decade ago a friend of mine was killed in a murder suicide by her ex and they had the store open again within an hour of the crime scene cleanup crew leaving and all my boss told me was "you can take tomorrow off if you need to".
mfer died of a heart attack a few years ago and I fuckin hope it was the longest most excruciating heart attack death on record.
I remember when Columbine was still the shooting, and basically the only major one for nearly a decade until the Virginia Tech one, then Sandy Hook...then the dam burst
It is wild those kids were nazis and they blamed it on quake.
Quake might have had something yo do with it if the kids bunnyhopped to avoid return fire. However the cops at the time were still on dial up so their lag was so abd they couldn't compete.
I'm not trying to be weird or sound weird about it, but when the blood of white children can't tip the scales against the gold of the gun lobby, it's over. Roll credits.
It's so frustrating that we have done zero things other than give more cops more resources. That's been our only thing we have done to protect kids and teachers. I hate it so much. It sucks so much such vulnerable group is just left to without protection in any sense of the world. We done nothing socially, infrastructure-ly, poltically, any other -ally i can think of other than give cops more money. I hate it.
I hate how much my brain just ticks this as "this is just a thing now, don't think about it much man". It's not a just a desensitization to me, I'm mad that it's "normalized" to me. These kids, teachers, and staff should never EVER have to even think about this sort of thing. School is hard enough without the looming threat of real mortal death.
I wonder if there's been an academic study of how covid changed what's considered "newsworthy" by network news. For example imagine a pre-covid situation where X is the minimum number of people to be killed in a random mass shooting so it's broadcast live on MSNBC. And X is ~3 or whatever. Is that still the case now that the public thinks covid is over and they're massively desensitized to death?
Is X the same or larger? My wild hunch is X is larger now.
Yea people love to talk shit about the youngest generation but they're unironically more heroic than your average Vietnam vet just for being willing to go to school everyday and be willing sacrifices to America's gun culture.
If my daughter told me she wasn't fucking going to school because nobody was doing anything to prevent her from being target practice I'd have a hard time coming up with a rebuttal.
I want to see more people joke about trump understanding the youth of today because he too has been shot at. Cause like, this just sucks too much to emotionally enguage with earnestly
School resource officer engaged with shooter and took him into custody, sheriff says
The resource officer at Apalachee High School engaged with the shooter and took him into custody, Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith told reporters.
“Obviously the shooter was armed and our school resource officer engaged him and the shooter quickly realized that if he did not give up, that it would end with an OIS — an Officer Involved Shooting. He gave up, got on the ground and the deputy took him into custody,” Smith said.
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Edit 1
MSNBC just said he's 14 and he was a student at the school.
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Edit 2
A white cop talking to the media said "Hate will not prevail in our community." I don't know the context or who he was. But I wonder if the shooter was a minority.
Winder, Georgia CNN — The 14-year-old suspect in the fatal mass shooting at a Winder, Georgia, high school has been identified as Colt Gray, Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Chris Hosey said at an afternoon news conference.
The suspect is a student at the school who will be charged with murder and will be handled as an adult as he moves through the criminal justice system, Hosey and Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith added.
As morally and ethically vile as it is - it's also disgusting, raw political opportunism to make decision and rush out a statement to the media hours after the shooting.
oh shit I used to live near-ish there. it's like halfway between Atlanta and Athens (UGA). like an upjumped commuter town that got just big enough to rate having hospitals and shit like that. wack.
Feels ghoulish to even talk about an ongoing tragedy this way, but I do find it curious that the shooter surrendered. Seems like that rarely happens in these situations.
So why does this keep happening? People have suggested too many guns, the NRA, mental health, and a lot of other reasons. I think the real reason is that it's not in the interest of the government to stop it. To support this claim I direct your attention to the schools in Israel. From an article in Newsweek
In 1974, at a school in the northern Israeli town of Ma'alot, three terrorists from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine murdered 22 children. After the Ma'alot Massacre, Israel put into place a nationwide system to fortify and protect all schools of 100 students or more. There have been no other school shootings in Israel since then.
Israel doesn't have a problem with school shootings. And it is in an area that is arguably more dangerous than the USA. The explanation is simple. They take school security seriously. Here in the US we don't. And call me cynical, but I think it's because it's a useful source of division among the citizens of the country. The blue team ostensibly wants gun control, the red team doesn't. But neither side ever does anything effective about it. And the more we argue amongst ourselves the less likely we are to unite and rise up to demand what we want as citizens of our country. That gives politicians free reign to ignore those of us who do and instead just take care of the donor class, the only citizens they are really interested in.