by XDM45 on Fri Dec 14, 2012 4:58 pm
This is sad, but what's even sadder is that it will happen again and again and again. I feel sorry for the families and everyone involved, just as I do every time this happens....but what does that change? I feel bad, but the victims are still dead. Eventually we'll all forget about this event and it will be replaced with the next mass shooting in a school, mall, stadium, elsewhere. We'll all feed bad for the people that died and their famillies, and it will repeat again. Different places, different faces, same situation with a different event.
The problem lies within certain people who are not only capable, but willing to do these things. As a society of individuals, we cannot prevent something like this happening, short of eliminating the human race (which would be unrealistic overkill), so all we can do is attempt to minimize and mitigate the risk to innocent lives in future events or else the same will repeatedly occur as previously mentioned.
In order to provide a possible solution, the one I recommend is the solution lies within certain people are not only capable, but able to defend their own lives and the lives of others. Normally, this is the police, but as we all know, they cannot respond fast enough to a situation when what's needed as a first-responder on-site in the moment it's happening. That first response from someone needs to come from within the event, not outside of it. I do not propose that subjugate the authority of the police and their duties, but rather that we find both a legal and a real-world solution to facilitate the stopping of the threat.
There's many facets to this from not only the legal point of view, but also the real-world view as well. As I write this, tons of questions and scenarios fill my mind and I realize that it is impossible for me to write an all-inclusive, air tight solution that will please everyone and not spark a debate. You and I most certainly can conceptualize all sort of different scenarios in our minds with regard to the legal, moral, ethical, physical, mental, spiritual, and many other aspects involved of an event, let alone a mass shooting event. So to keep it simple, I bring up the old faithful mantra that we need to become a well-trained and well-armed society.
Will this result in no more mass shootings or deaths? No. I doubt that if a carrier was in the theater in Colorado that they would have been able to stop the shooter with his tear gas and body armor setup. Possible? Sure. Probable? Not likely.
If someone was carrying at Accent Signage, yes, I do believe that the chances would have been much, much better for the survival of innocent people there and that less lives would have been lost. Can I say that for sure? No.
If someone comes into your house, you are hopefully well trained and armed, using first the power of your mind to think, and if need be, the force of your body and weapon to defend your own life if justified in doing so if escape or de-escalation is not an option. I don't think anyone here would ONLY call 911, if someone broke into their home, but yet that is really our ONLY option in places where guns are not allowed either by law or by the business, organization, or individual(s) there. In our home situation, we'd grab our gun and call 911, so why can't we do that everywhere? I'm not saying that once you grab your gun that you must use it, no, quite the contrary, it is a last resort..... but as the old adage goes, I'd rather have a gun and not need it, than need it and not have it.
Clearly, the people in this school needed a gun to defend themselves with since there are so many dead and they could not all escape, nor could they could not defend themselves.
Again, my sympathies to the dead, the families and all involved, but we really do need to become a well-trained and armed society. The madness is not in this shooting, because that is merely a symptom of the disease; the madness is that we fail to learn from these events and do not make the changes to mitigate risk by preparing for the next one.
Gnothi Seauton