Posted on 03/13/2018 5:46:56 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
Parents across the country are being urged to let their children participate in the National School Walkout on March 14. Yet, few parents (and kids!) understand the walkouts true mission. At my childrens elementary school in Northern Virginia, school officials are telling parents the walkout is meant to memorialize the 17 victims of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida.
Yet, according to the National School Walkout website, the real mission of the walkout is to demand Congress pass more restrictive gun laws. The website specifically states: Students and allies are organizing the national school walkout to demand Congress pass legislation Congress must take meaningful action and pass federal gun reform legislation.
So, the children walking out of the classroom on March 14th wont be spending the time in quiet prayer or reflection. Instead, school kids (even those in elementary school) are going to be used as props by professional anti-gun activists to push for specific legislation.
Some schools are even aiding in the effort by coordinating with the walkout organizers, providing safe spaces for kids who participate in the walkout, promoting the event on school Facebook and Twitter accounts, and allowing school buses to transport kids to and from gun control rallies.
Considering that many public schools are helping to rally more kids to the cause and are even supplying school resources and personnel time to the effort, tax payers should ask: Is this an acceptable use of school funds? More importantly, why is a publicly funded school supporting one side of a very contentious and complex constitutional matter?
Some might even wonder: What other political causes can I expect my public school to promote? Should conservatives in politically red areas of the country expect schools to help transport kids to next years March for Life? Or how about for the inauguration on the Mall when Trump is reelected in 2020?
Educators should also be concerned that the politicization of this issue avoids the nuance of what went wrong in Parkland that allowed the terrible shooting to occur, and what policies might actually help prevent the next one.
For instance, we now know that between 2008 and 2017, the Broward County sheriffs office received 45 calls from concerned citizens related to the Parkland shooter and his brother. Social workers visited the his house multiple times. Yet, none of these reports (which included threats of violence and warnings that these troubled boys had access to weapons) were entered into the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). If these many incidents had been logged into NICS, the shooter wouldnt have passed a background check, and he wouldnt have been able to purchase a firearm.
This isnt just a problem in Broward County. According to a 2016 audit by the Justice Department, all 50 states are guilty of not properly submitting records to the database. Even mental health information largely goes unreported. Considering this, parents might want to ask if their own police departments and social service networks are consistently reporting incidents to the NICS.
They also might want to consider that at Parkland, three Broward County Sherriffs deputies stood down outside the school, which allowed Cruz to continue his killing spree. Pushing for better police training and more effective communication with local schools is another area where parents should focus.
And there are more important areas to explore, such as the actions of the armed school resource officer employed by Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Instead of trying to keep students safe (as he was trained to do), he huddled in a stairwell with his gun holstered. In light of this, parents might want to ask questions about the level of training their schools resource officers are receiving.
Americans ought to vigorously debate these issues, but we should also recognize that new laws wont make a difference if they go unenforced. Moreover, there are already 300-plus million guns in the United States. That means regardless of how we restrict gun ownership, we need to be prepared to respond to acts of violence in the future.
Sadly, many parents have decided to pass on these hard questions and instead join a movement that is using children as props in a complex policy issue. We can all agree that children deserve safety and security at school. There are ways to help move toward that goal, but taking advantage of our kids for political ends isnt one of them.
So glad you’re keeping her home! I sure would. :)
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I made a statement along these same lines this weekend to some friends.
If Trump can appoint one or two more conservative SCOTUS judges we will buy more time.
But even with that, short of a massive revival in this country, I don't see a positive future for the USA.
Government union schools don't teach American history or the Constitution any more.
Do public schools even teach history or the US Constitution anymore?
Had The Butcheress of Benghazi been Elected, you would have seen two or three immediate Vacancies on the Court and she would have filled them with young Leftist Judges who would do their best to end America as we knew it.
Ditto my motivation.
Well, as far as my local schools go it went pretty much as expected. Around 10% of the students left class (sunny day) and stood around for 17 minutes. There were no large signs or banners but might have been small ones. Pretty much a non-event - from a distance looked like they were outside for a fire drill.
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