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'Nothing Will Ever Be The Same'
Hartford Courant ^
| 12/15/12
| MATTHEW KAUFFMAN
Posted on 12/15/2012 11:47:01 AM PST by jimbo123
-snip-
One of those killed, first-grade teacher Victoria Soto, died after hiding her students, a source told The Courant.
Soto was a teacher in room 10, the classroom next to where the shooting began, the source said. She hid her students 15 or 16 of them, some possibly in a bathroom before the gunman entered the room.
He wanted to shoot more people, the source said, but, seeing no one but Soto, he shot her, then left the room, the source sad.
(Excerpt) Read more at courant.com ...
TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Connecticut
KEYWORDS: adamlanza; banglist; connecticut; lanza; newtown; sandyhookshooter; sandyhookshooting; sandyhookteacher
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To: jimbo123
The answer to all this, is not what we need to remove from the hands of men, but what we need to fill the hearts of men with.
The answer is to live, teach and preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and Him crucified.
We do not need a tea party revival, we need a Bible based revival.
21
posted on
12/15/2012 12:59:19 PM PST
by
RaceBannon
(The answer to all this, is not what to remove from the hands of men, but what to fill their hearts)
To: A_perfect_lady
Amazing how many Freepers hate teachers so much that even one who saved her students and died in the process doesnt meet their oh-so-perfect standards. Id venture to say this woman was worth more than the self-righteous creeps who use conservatism as an excuse to hate rather than as a set of principles to live by.
I think that people make comments at times, without thinking of all the factors involved. When they do this, they expose themselves to ridicule. I understand your comments, and agree with them to a point.
A bit off topic, some folks think action must be taken to earn the credit of being a hero. Anotherwords, you can't passively be a hero. IMO, this woman took action to protect her kids, and most definately was a hero.
I don't think we should use our principles to simply hate, but I do find myself quite upset at some things people do/don't do when they should. So at times, I find myself quite upset. Is this a time when we should focus on that aspect of what people are? No. This is an event so big that people can be judged separately from our normal areas of concern. We must dismiss those other areas of concern for the moment, unless they are related to this incident (gun control), and even then we should address them in the abstract. Whatever people's positions were on some topics, this is a terrible event and compassion should trump. This loss of life was tragic.
In the real world separate from this, we have a situation where our children are being collectively separated from God, from ultimate respect for parents, from respect for traditional values, and indoctrinated to be accepting of things that have been considered to be taboo for thousands of years. On top of this, you have children being graduated without being able to read, do simply everyday math, and the like.
Is this ultimately all teacher's fault? No. On the other hand I listen for the outrage I feel about all this, to be echoed by teachers. All I hear is crickets!
We have not had teachers armed before this. I am not going to be outraged that these teachers weren't armed. I'm not going to blame them for what took place.
This was a tragic event, and I couldn't be more sorry for what happened to these teachers and support staff, as well as the children.
It's a day when we all hang our heads and lament what took place, regardless of our political or specific moral beliefs. Nobody deserved this. Each of them deserves our collective sorrow.
22
posted on
12/15/2012 1:36:27 PM PST
by
DoughtyOne
(Hurricane Sandy..., a week later and over 60 million Americans still didn't have power.)
To: DoughtyOne
I am largely in agreement, though I would add two things.
A more refined definition of hero: to be a hero, one must take action to aid another that is at least in someway effective at great risk to one’s self. This lady qualifies.
I also doubt that teachers have always been defanged. There is a great chapter in Farmer Boy (one of the books in Laura Ingals Wilder’s Little House series) relating an incident in a one-room school house in upstate New York in the mid-19th century. The bigger boys in the class had beaten the previous teacher so that he had to leave and eventually died as a result of the beating. A friend of his took the position and practiced privately with a bull-whip, which he kept in his desk and used when the day for its use came. From what I have read of 19th century schooling I am sure that this was not unique.
23
posted on
12/15/2012 1:50:21 PM PST
by
Hieronymus
( (It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged. --G.K. Chesterton))
To: Hieronymus
24
posted on
12/15/2012 1:58:57 PM PST
by
DoughtyOne
(Hurricane Sandy..., a week later and over 60 million Americans still didn't have power.)
To: A_perfect_lady
Thanks for posting that. As a retired teacher, I can proudly say that I knew many teachers who would have done all they could to protect their students.
Many are just sick because of this evil act.....me too.
25
posted on
12/15/2012 1:59:31 PM PST
by
jch10
(7th generation Floridian)
To: DoughtyOne
26
posted on
12/15/2012 2:01:11 PM PST
by
Hieronymus
( (It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged. --G.K. Chesterton))
To: jimbo123
I am no fan of today's public schools (and many of the people who staff them), but it seems like this young woman protected the children in her care the best way she could and lost her life after doing so. She qualified for the title.
Mr. niteowl77
27
posted on
12/15/2012 2:28:55 PM PST
by
niteowl77
(Oh, crap.)
To: jimbo123
I’m glad she was a “hero”. But it is too bad she had to be a martyr to the cause of “gun free zones”.
Think about how much better this story would be, if when the gunman walked in and found no students, he instead was facing this teacher with a gun in her hand, shooting him dead.
She had plenty of time to prepare. She knew there was a gunman. She was able to get the kids out. It would have been easy for her to get a gun out of a locked drawer, load it, and sit behind the desk pointing at the door, waiting for him to come in.
But instead, she could do nothing to save herself.
To: DoughtyOne
She died protecting her charges—She did what a teacher should do. Over and over we have seen teachers and college professors come forward and give their lives to protect their students. This woman should have a statue put up for her—The school should change its name to honor her “gift of life” she purchased for her students with her own blood.
To: CharlesWayneCT
Easy to say, but almost impossible to accomplish. I am sure that the parents know that this young woman did all she could. Greater love than this no man has but that he lay down his life for his friends. A truly Christlike act.
30
posted on
12/15/2012 4:42:38 PM PST
by
RobbyS
(Christus rex.)
To: ex-snook
And what, exactly, is “too much” for her life which she sacrificed for her students’ chances at survival?
To: jimbo123
God bless her but the public schools have to train their people to evacuate, not huddle in corners waiting for the evil bastards. Teach your children to act. Escape , evade, run like hell to the nearest help. But do not encourage them to hide under beds or run upstairs and lock doors that can be broken open with one swift kick.
32
posted on
12/15/2012 7:38:40 PM PST
by
jwalsh07
To: jwalsh07
33
posted on
12/15/2012 7:48:30 PM PST
by
Duchess47
("One day I will leave this world and dream myself to Reality" Crazy Horse)
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