Have you ever noticed that the United States population as a whole seems to suffer from some sort of societal forgetfulness? Something bad happens, we’re saddened and then life goes on. Too often life goes on without us doing something to prevent that bad thing from happening again. It’s a rather perverted way of national living but that does seem to be our mode of operation: a desired, collective amnesia.
Perhaps we do it as a form of mental health preservation or perhaps we do it because to do anything else would go against our belief in ourselves as the best, the brightest, the grand, great hope for the planet.
Don’t misunderstand me, I’m not denigrating the US, I’m simply saying that we need to yank our heads out of the sand and realize that in the case of gun violence we are not the hope, we are the problem. We are our own worst enemy. We are killing ourselves; we are killing each other in horrific ways and numbers.
We have to change the thinking, change the laws, and change the lawmakers who refuse to pass laws that can assist in halting the carnage. Sometimes politicians have to finally step in (or we elect new ones who will). We must find the ways, the means, and the backbone to stop people from killing each other and killing the most innocent among us in our schools. If politicians are too selfish, too ignorant, or too afraid to grasp that concept, it’s time to vote them out. Period.
The list…updated
Wikipedia has a list of school shootings. The list changes often, being constantly updated. Here are a few of the school shootings in the US since 1966:
- University of Texas at Austin Tower Massacre – August 1, 1966
- Kent State shootings – May 4, 1970
- Jackson State killings – Jackson, Mississippi, May 14-15, 1970
- California State University, Fullerton Library Massacre – Fullerton, California, July 12, 1976
- Parkway South Junior High School shooting – Saint Louis, Missouri, 1983
- Stockton Massacre – Stockton, California, 1989
- University of Iowa shooting – Iowa City, Iowa, 1991
- Simon’s Rock College of Bard shooting – Great Barrington, Massachusetts, December 14, 1992
- Richland High School shooting – Lynnville, Tennessee, November 15, 1995
- Frontier Junior High shooting – Moses Lake, Washington, February 2, 1996
- Pearl High School shooting, Pearl, Mississippi, October 1, 1997
- Heath High School shooting, West Paducah, Kentucky, December 1, 1997
- Jonesboro massacre – Jonesboro, Arkansas, March 24, 1998
- Thurston High School shooting – Springfield, Oregon, May 21, 1998
- Columbine High School massacre – Littleton, Colorado, April 20, 1999
- Heritage High School shooting – Conyers, Georgia, May 20, 1999
- Santana High School – Santee, California, (near San Diego, California)
- Appalachian School of Law shooting – Grundy, Virginia, January 16, 2002
- Rocori High School shootings – Cold Spring, Minnesota, 2003
- Southwood Middle School tragedy, Miami, Florida; February 3, 2004
- Red Lake High School massacre – Red Lake, Minnesota, 2005
- Amish school shooting – Nickel Mines, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, 2006
- Platte Canyon High School shooting – Bailey, Colorado, 2006
- Henry Foss High School – Tacoma, Washington, January 3, 2007
- University of Washington- Seattle, Washington, April 2, 2007
- Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, Virginia, April 16, 2007
- Delaware State University, Dover, Delaware September 21, 2007
- Success tech Academy, Cleveland, Ohio, October 10, 2007
- Notre Dame Elementary, Portsmouth, OH, February 7, 2008
- Louisiana Tech, Baton Rouge, LA February 8, 2008
- Mitchell High School, Memphis TN, February 11, 2008
- E.O. Green Junior High School, Oxnard, CA February 12, 2008
- Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL February 14, 2008
- Kelly Elementary School, Carlsbad, CA October 8th, 2010
- Louisiana Schnell Elementary School, Placerville, California, February 2, 2011
- Sandy Hook Elementary School, Newtown, Connecticut, December 14, 2012
- Taft Union High School, Taft, California, January 10, 2013
- Osborn High School, Detroit, Michigan, January 12, 2013
- Stevens Institute of Business and Arts, St. Louis, Missouri, January 15, 2013
- Hazard Community and Technical College, Hazard, Kentucky, January 15, 2013
- Chicago State University, Chicago, Illinois, January 16, 2013
- Price Middle School, Atlanta, Georgia, January 31, 2013
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 19, 2013
- La Salle High School, Cincinnati, Ohio, April 29, 2013
- Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy, Decatur, Georgia, August 20, 2013
- Carver High School, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, August 30, 2013
- Sparks Middle School, Washoe County Nevada, October 21, 2013
- North Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, North Carolina, November 2, 2013
- Stephenson High School, Lithonia, Georgia, November 3, 2013
- Brashear High School, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, November 13, 2013
- South Dakota School of Mines & Technology Rapid City, South Dakota, November 26, 2013
- West Orange High School, Winter Garden, Florida, December 4, 2013
- Arapahoe High School, Centennial, Colorado, December 13, 2013
- Edison High School, Fresno, California, December 19, 2013
- Liberty Technology Magnet High School, Jackson, Tennessee, January 9, 2014
- Hillhouse High School, New Haven, Connecticut, January 13, 2014
- Berrendo Middle School, Roswell, New Mexico, January 14, 2014
- Delaware Valley Charter School, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, January 17, 2014
- Widener University, Chester, Pennsylvania, January 20, 2014
- Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, January 21, 2014
- South Carolina State University, Orangeburg, South Carolina, January 24, 2014
- Angeles Valley College, Los Angeles, California, January 25, 2014
- Rebound High School, Carbondale, Illinois, January 27, 2014
- President Theodore Roosevelt High School, Honolulu, Hawai’i, January 28, 2014
- Tennessee State University, Nashville, Tennessee, January 28, 2014
- Eastern Florida State College, Palm Bay, Florida, January 30, 2014
- North High School, Des Moines, Iowa, January 31, 2014
- Bend High School, Bend, Oregon, February 8, 2014
- Salisbury High School Salisbury, North Carolina, February 10, 2014
- Charles F. Brush High School, Lyndhurst, Ohio, February 10, 2014
- University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, February 12, 2014
- San Jose State University, San Jose, California, February 21, 2014
- Georgia Regents University, Augusta, Georgia, February 22, 2014
- The Academy of Knowledge Preschool, Miami, Florida, March 12, 2014
- Benjamin Banneker High School, College Park, Georgia, March 25, 2014
- D. H. Conley High School, Greenville, North Carolina, April 9, 2014
- East English Village Preparatory Academy, Detroit, Michigan, April 11, 2014
- Saint Mary School, Griffith, Indiana, April 21, 2014
- Paine College, Augusta, Georgia, May 4, 2014
- Paine College, Augusta, Georgia, May 5, 2014
- Georgia Gwinnett College, Lawrenceville, Georgia, May 8, 2014
- John F. Kennedy High School, Richmond, California, May 14, 2014
- University of California, Santa Barbara, Isla Vista, California, May 23, 2014
- Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, Washington, June 5, 2014
- Reynolds High School, Troutdale, Oregon, June 10, 2014
- Greenwood Lakes Middle School, Lake Mary, Florida, September 10, 2014
- Pewaukee High School, Pewaukee, Wisconsin, September 18, 2014
- Indiana State University, Terre Haute, Indiana, September 27, 2014
- Albemarle High School, Albemarle, North Carolina, September 30, 2014
- Fern Creek Traditional High School, Louisville, Kentucky, September 30, 2014
- Langston Hughes High School, Fairburn, Georgia, October 3, 2014
- Marysville Pilchuck High School, Marysville, Washington, October 24, 2014
That’s a partial list of US school shootings. School shootings. Ninety-two – and the list keeps growing. A list of shootings – killings – in places that should be – must be – free from violence and murder.
There should be only one enemy in a school, college, or university and that is ignorance. A school must be a neutral zone as far as hate, fear, jealousy, and violence are concerned. Certainly, and more than anything else, students are not the enemy. Regardless of hair, clothes, race, ethnicity, disability, music, piercing, cars, political leanings or anything else that someone will use to set themselves apart (or use to fit in), a student is not the enemy. And neither are the teachers, the staff, or the administrators.
Here’s an interesting question: what will teachers think when going to work this morning? Will they wonder, “Who has a gun?” Each of those women and men will have a number of thoughts and feelings known only to them. But do you want to know the great thing? Today they’re in that classroom still optimistic about the future. In classrooms around the world, they are still teaching. And they will be again tomorrow. And we will be there with them. Our job is to make it safer for all of them. And we have to do it now.
The entire list from 1764 to now is at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_school_shootings_in_the_United_States
The above uses information and quotes from Wikipedia, Associated Press, ABC News, Baltimore Sun, previous columns, and additional news sources