Posted on 02/23/2018 5:58:37 AM PST by davikkm
Elie Mystal, a lawyer, Harvard graduate, and editor at the popular Above the Law legal blog, has written a column suggesting that proposals to arm teachers in public schools will lead to black students being murdered. In his post, You Realize Arming Teachers Is Going To Lead To Black Students Getting Murdered By Their Teacher, Right?, Mystal not only dismisses the idea of arming teachers as an ineffective way to prevent mass shootings, but also argues that the inherent racial prejudices of teachers will lead to tragic results:
[T]heres one more problem that Im sure most white people havent thought about yet: arming American teachers will directly result in students of color being shot to death at school.
I know that because the only other group of public employees that is armed at the behest of the state shoots unarmed people of color on the reg. The cops actually receive extensive training on how to use their firearms, how to asses threats, and how to deescalate situations, and yet they still murder innocent civilians all the time.
Giving a teacher a gun is ASKING them to be afraid. It makes poor judgment a homicidal offense. And that danger will be borne by black and brown students. The students who make teachers afraid just by their very existence.
America is entirely too racist to arm teachers. Our legal system is INCAPABLE of holding public employees to account for murdering minorities. Black and brown students should not have to die because disgruntled white boys are shooting up their schools.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
Well...just the bad ones.
Well, if they are claiming black students get out of control and deserve to be shot, there’s probably lots of inner city school teachers that would agree.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.