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The Range
Law & Order
South Dakota to let schools arm teachers
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<blockquote data-quote="Glocktogo" data-source="post: 2138369" data-attributes="member: 1132"><p>Umm...what? </p><p></p><p>I really don't understand how anyone can call for arming people in schools, but oppose having improved physical security measures??? You make it sound like I want to up-armor school buses against mines and have military troops in full combat gear at every door. Where did you get this nonsense? </p><p></p><p>When you walk into a store that has an armed guard, do you feel more or less secure than when you walk into a store with no guard? When you see an unarmed guard at a kiosk, do you consider them an effective countermeasure, or an easy target? When you shop for a home, would you prefer it have flimsy hollow core doors with a single knob lock on the entrances, or a solid core (or better yet, steel) door with a quality deadbolt?</p><p></p><p>If you like the idea of any of these things, why in the world would you consider them to be excessive for a school? I just don't get it? Here I am agreeing that we should extend gun rights into "gun free zones". All I want is to ensure that we do it right the first time, so we don't wind up on the national news as the poster child for why guns in schools are a bad idea. <img src="/images/smilies/rolleyes2.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":rolleyes2" title="Rolleyes2 :rolleyes2" data-shortname=":rolleyes2" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Glocktogo, post: 2138369, member: 1132"] Umm...what? I really don't understand how anyone can call for arming people in schools, but oppose having improved physical security measures??? You make it sound like I want to up-armor school buses against mines and have military troops in full combat gear at every door. Where did you get this nonsense? When you walk into a store that has an armed guard, do you feel more or less secure than when you walk into a store with no guard? When you see an unarmed guard at a kiosk, do you consider them an effective countermeasure, or an easy target? When you shop for a home, would you prefer it have flimsy hollow core doors with a single knob lock on the entrances, or a solid core (or better yet, steel) door with a quality deadbolt? If you like the idea of any of these things, why in the world would you consider them to be excessive for a school? I just don't get it? Here I am agreeing that we should extend gun rights into "gun free zones". All I want is to ensure that we do it right the first time, so we don't wind up on the national news as the poster child for why guns in schools are a bad idea. :rolleyes2 [/QUOTE]
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