Albany Times Union

How many deaths will move Congress on gun safety?

- By Paul Donnelly Paul Donnelly lives in Poughkeeps­ie.

Over a quarter-million students have experience­d gun violence at school since the Columbine High School shooting in 1999. Since 2001, more school-aged children have died from guns than on-duty police officers and active-duty military combined. So far in 2022, not even halfway through the year, there have been 250 mass shootings.

School is supposed to be one of the safest places in the country. However, mass shootings and gun violence are an all-toooften phenomenon in our country’s schools and communitie­s.

I graduated high school just a few months after the Columbine shooting, and have spent the past 19 years as a teacher in what has become known as the “mass shooting generation.” Lockdown drills, emergency evacuation­s and metal detectors have become part of the normal school routine. I don’t remember a time since becoming a teacher when the threat of a school shooting wasn’t a possibilit­y. Just a few weeks ago during a middle-school student government meeting, the school was forced into lockdown because a student was shot at 17 times while walking home from school.

As a social studies teacher, I understand how embedded the Second Amendment is in America’s social fabric. However, the Constituti­on was written to promote general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty. Surely one could argue that all rights in this country are not absolute. That should be true for gun safety legislatio­n, too. One’s right to bear arms should not supersede another’s right to life.

In today’s highly polarized society, the solutions on how to tackle gun violence span the spectrum of arming teachers to outlawing certain types of semiautoma­tic firearms. The stark reality is that students shouldn't have to live in fear during the school day thinking they’re next, and parents shouldn’t have to worry if it’ll be the last time they’ll see their child when they leave for school each morning.

It’s time to demand commonsens­e gun safety legislatio­n to protect the our nation’s children. There has to be a number where Americans say, “That’s just too many children,” a number that will force our elected officials to enact legislatio­n that will stop this carnage. Twelve dead at Columbine wasn’t enough, 26 dead at Sandy Hook wasn’t enough, and 19 in Texas won’t be enough. What’s the number, America?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States