News you won't see on CNN - School Shooting Hero properly lays blame

The kid doesn't want all the negative attention Hogg has received.

The republican mind can't or doesn't want to see the obvious.

Because the next thing you want is to have rabid right wingers paint a bullseye on you after being used as target practice by one.
 
Do you think that the government was successful in protecting the kids?

There’s no way the government at any level or all levels combined can prevent these shootings from happening because of the amount of guns in America. There simply is too many guns.

There’s something called critical mass in sustaining a nuclear reaction. It’s how we are able to predictably create nuclear energy. It takes levels of material reaching a certain threshold then the reaction is sustained. It’s the same thing with guns. We’ve reached a level of guns that it’s impossible to stop the shootings. It’s now at a predictable and sustained level.
 
School shooting hero properly blames the Sheriff and School Officials for failing to arrest the school shooter and stop the shooting. Does not blame guns.

Parkland shooting hero blames sheriff and superintendent for failing to prevent massacre
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/04/0...ntendent-for-failing-to-prevent-massacre.html

A student who was gravely wounded after being shot five times while shielding classmates during the Florida high school shooting in February criticized the county sheriff and school superintendent Friday saying they failed the victims by not arresting the shooter before the massacre.

Anthony Borges, 15, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., was hailed a hero after he used his body to protect the lives of 20 others students after accused gunman Nikolas Cruz opened fire at the school on Feb. 14, 2018, killing 17 people.

He was released from the hospital Wednesday after suffering wounds to the lungs, abdomen and legs.

Borges' attorney read a statement from the teen during a news conference criticizing Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel and Superintendent Robert Runcie for the massacre. Borges, too weak to talk, sat silently in a wheelchair with his right leg propped up. His statement specifically attacked the Promise program, a school district and sheriff office initiative that allows students who commit minor crimes on campus to avoid arrest if they complete rehabilitation. Runcie has said Cruz, a former Stoneman Douglas student, was never in the program, but Borges and his attorney, Alex Arreaza, said school and sheriff's officials knew Cruz was dangerous.

Deputies received at least a dozen calls about Cruz, 19, over the years and he spent two years in a school for children with emotional and disciplinary problems before being allowed to transfer to Stoneman Douglas. Last year, records show he was forced to leave after incidents – other students said he abused an ex-girlfriend and fought her new boyfriend. Weeks before the shooting, both the FBI and the sheriff's office received calls saying Cruz could become a school shooter but neither took action.

Runcie and Israel "failed us students, teachers and parents alike on so many levels," Arreaza read for Borges, who sat next to his father, Roger. "I want all of us to move forward to end the environment that allowed people like Nikolas Cruz to fall through the cracks. You knew he was a problem years ago and you did nothing. He should have never been in school with us."

Arreaza said that although Borges’ father, a maintenance worker, appreciates that people consider his son a hero for protecting classmates, he believes such talk detracts from the serious message that action must be taken to stop school shootings.

"He doesn't want there to be any more bubblegum hero stuff," Arreaza said.

Many of the school shooting’s survivors have spoken out against gun violence and called on lawmakers for stricter gun control in order to prevent future tragedies.

Borges visited his high school for the first time since the massacre but said he is scared to return for classes, fearing more violence.

Borges, who came to Florida from Venezuela three years ago, was a Boy Scout and well-known for his soccer skills, playing as a forward and training with FC Barcelona’s youth academy near Fort Lauderdale.
The hero here is not wrong. Heightened vigilance and improved response to warnings is needed. His viewpoint, however, is going to do something he hasn't intended. It is going to serve the gun lobby as a deflection away from more effective measures, in all venues, of reducing the probability of mass shootings . Most effective of all measures, that could be adopted without violation of the Second Amendment, would be for the U.S. to adopt, word for word, Canada's gun laws. Canada, like the U.S., is a nation of guns, but the types of guns owned in Canada is very different! There is no excuse for not immediately banning sales of assault style rifles, as we did before, with additional bans on large magazines and bump stocks. Yet the Gun Lobby opposes this. There is no logical reason for having piecemeal gun laws and background checks. Yet the gun lobbyists oppose uniformity in the laws and universal background checks. They want to preserve all manner of loopholes, because that is what they get paid to do. We should not blame them. We should blame ourselves for letting them do this to us. They are inured to lost lives through gun violence. They get their way via political campaign money. They do it in the name of "freedom" and the "Second Amendment". We ought to call them on their subterfuge.
 
The hero here is not wrong. Heightened vigilance and improved response to warnings is needed. His viewpoint, however, is going to do something he hasn't intended. It is going to serve the gun lobby as a deflection away from more effective measures, in all venues, of reducing the probability of mass shootings . Most effective of all measures, that could be adopted without violation of the Second Amendment, would be for the U.S. to adopt, word for word, Canada's gun laws. Canada, like the U.S., is a nation of guns, but the types of guns owned in Canada is very different! There is no excuse for not immediately banning sales of assault style rifles, as we did before, with additional bans on large magazines and bump stocks. Yet the Gun Lobby opposes this. There is no logical reason for having piecemeal gun laws and background checks. Yet the gun lobbyists oppose uniformity in the laws and universal background checks. They want to preserve all manner of loopholes, because that is what they get paid to do. We should not blame them. We should blame ourselves for letting them do this to us. They are inured to lost lives through gun violence. They get their way via political campaign money. They do it in the name of "freedom" and the "Second Amendment". We ought to call them on their subterfuge.

Oh, stow it already with the Canadian gun laws. They wouldn't work here - because you can't get all the illegal weapons off the streets. Go live in Canada if you love it so much!
 
Oh, stow it already with the Canadian gun laws. They wouldn't work here - because you can't get all the illegal weapons off the streets. Go live in Canada if you love it so much!
Yah right. Nothing can work here except semiautomatic assault style guns equipped with bumpstocks acquired at a gun show.
 
There is no excuse for not immediately banning sales of assault style rifles, as we did before, with additional bans on large magazines and bump stocks.
These "assault style rifles"?

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Oh, stow it already with the Canadian gun laws. They wouldn't work here - because you can't get all the illegal weapons off the streets. Go live in Canada if you love it so much!

I like how you want civil discourse on gun laws and then tell people to leave the country when they bring up an idea.
 
There’s no way the government at any level or all levels combined can prevent these shootings from happening because of the amount of guns in America. There simply is too many guns.
I used to think this as well, and when you say "prevent" you mean of course significantly reduce the probability. In fact, Lucrum had me totally convinced it was true that we could never do much about gun violence and mass shootings because there were just too many guns already and the Second amendment constrained us. But I have learned much more, and now I am convinced I was wrong. Logically the number of guns is a factor, but the types of guns and their distribution should be a far more important factor. The usual arguments are incorrectly phrased. The arguments should be probability based and take into account both the types of guns and their distribution among owners. Arguing that doing this or that will stop gun crimes is is a losing argument. The arguments must relate to probability. And of course any measure in the U.S. will be Second Amendment constrained. But this is, in reality, not a significant restraint. It has been falsely made to appear so.

For example, per capita gun ownership in Canada is estimated to be about half, or a little less, what it is in the U.S. It is easy therefore to blame the higher rate of gun crime in the U.S. on the much higher per capita rate of gun ownership. However this argument breaks down as soon as distribution is taken into account. And if the difference in gun laws in the two countries is ignored, than the arguments based on per capita gun ownership are no longer persuasive in the least. The gun laws are very different in Canada, as is the rate of gun crimes and mass shootings.. Just the number of guns divided by the population is far too crude a measure to allow any conclusion, but it does provide an attractive, but defective, argument for the gun lobby.
 
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