Friendly Lich said:
Ok some people have made very good points. So have have a second more simple idea that I am sure has been thought of.
Why cant we have at least one trained and ballistic armored security person in each school to take out shooters going on rampages in schools? It would provide people with some jobs and a trained professional would do well against the average young shooter.
There was a post I saw on 4chan about this. I don't know how to work images on these forums, so I'll just quote it.
Yes, because instead of being responsible and looking at restricting gun ownership we should be taking steps to enable our teachers to be armed with Glocks and possibly have an AR over their shoulder. I've always thought a better solution to gun control is simply to have the teachers engage the shooter in a firefight in the classroom.
Maybe the teacher should have a pillbox of sorts with just a microphone to speak to students and a few holes for shooting out of.
The issue was arming teachers rather than having guards, the the point still stands. Increasing the number of guns and bullets in the air will not make children safe, weirdly enough.
In terms of prevention, authority is not the answer. Any first-year psychology student could tell you that someone acting from their id (the impulsive part of the mind, responsible for ideas such as "I'll shoot up the school, that'll teach those fuckers") does
not react well to authority/ideas from the superego (the elevated part of the mind).
Like, you ever do something dumb and impulsive, and when your parents/teacher lecture about it, you get defensive, even if you know it was dumb and impulsive? And then you'll start mouthing off, or just being defiant for the sake of being defiant? It's that feeling, but it would be told to you every single day by people with guns. Not a good way to encourage co-operation and trust.
The best solution is, will continue to be, and always has been to both limit and enforce gun control and to reform and improve society so that the factors that lead to school shootings (mental health, cultural values, interactions with peers, etc.) are reduced. You need to treat the disease, not the symptom.