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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday March 03 2018, @07:53AM   Printer-friendly
from the mental-issues dept.

The Los Angeles Times reports

After their teacher fires a gun at school, Georgia students use opportunity to challenge Trump's proposal

Jesse Randall Davidson wasn't a stranger, some mysterious threat from the outside. He was a bearded, bespectacled, 53-year-old social studies teacher and the play-by-play announcer for the football games at Dalton High School in northwest Georgia.

But when the teacher brought a gun to school, barricaded himself in his classroom [February 28], and fired a single shot, students quickly recognized that this wasn't just a sad local incident.

Amid national outrage over school shootings--and suggestions by President Trump that schools would be safer if some teachers packed guns--it was a political event.

"my favorite teacher at Dalton high school just blockaded his door and proceeded to shoot", a 16-year-old student named Chondi Chastain tweeted at the National Rifle Assn., earning more than 17,000 retweets. "We had to run out The back of the school in the rain. Students were being trampled and screaming. I dare you to tell me arming teachers will make us safe."

[...] When students came to his door at room 413 during third period--a time his classroom is normally empty--it was locked, and Davidson wouldn't let them in, police said later.

"My brother, who was one door down from the teacher, said he was yelling at his students to 'get the [expletive] out of here'", junior Henry Hansen, 17, wrote in a private message on Twitter.

The principal, Steve Bartoo, tried to unlock the door with a key, but Davidson "slammed the door before I could open it and said, 'Don't come in here, I have a gun'", Bartoo said at a televised news conference.

Bartoo put the school into lockdown mode, and soon after, Davidson "apparently fired a shot from a handgun through an exterior window of the classroom", Dalton police spokesman Bruce Frazier said at a separate news conference. "It did not appear that it was aimed at anybody."

[...] Dalton police, the Whitfield County Sheriff's Office, the Georgia State Patrol, and federal law enforcement agencies all responded to the emergency. "More or less everybody with a badge in the area came running", Frazier said.

After about half an hour, Davidson surrendered and was taken into custody

[...] The Dalton students immediately turned to social media to take issue with Trump's calls to arm teachers.

Heavy.com adds

Records show Davidson has been charged with aggravated assault with a gun, terroristic threats and acts, carrying a weapon in a school safety zone without a license, reckless conduct, disrupting public school, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. He is being held without bail at the Whitfield County Jail.

[...] Davidson has a history of bizarre medical episodes both at school and outside of school, The Chattanoogan reports.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Sunday March 04 2018, @07:29AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Sunday March 04 2018, @07:29AM (#647545) Journal
    The thing is, I read that post. I don't agree with your characterization of it. Sure, the insistence on the "right" is bizarrely off key given that you didn't actually say anything to dispute the existence of the right, but it's not

    You're right about safeties not being perfect, but they're better then the alternative and to me seem a reasonable regulation along with strongly encouraging never having a bullet in the chamber.

    And what would be the enforcement mechanisms for this regulation? We can already show a high degree of negligence in court, for example, if someone causes damage or injury from accidentally firing a weapon because they had the safety off and a bullet chambered. Regulation isn't required for that.

    But if we're going to stop people on the street or go into their homes, in order to inspect their firearms, that's a very intrusive step which I don't agree is justified.

    Insistence on safety equipment is also being exploited as a means to suppress firearm ownership, for example, mandating trigger-locks, excessive gun safe standards, DNA bullets, and other frivolous but costly safety devices and procedures. That incidentally is another reason gun rights advocates often oppose even simple-sounding safety procedures. Because it is a pretext to insert more costly and intrusive obstacles later on. All such safety equipment and procedures needs to be bypassed in order to use the firearm. Not much of a problem if one is merely shooting for entertainment, but a very big deal, if one is using that firearm in self-defense.