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Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 10:07 pm
by flintknapper
jimlongley wrote:
brianko wrote:Further evidence of the need to support additional training for CHL's who will carry in schools is provided by Harrold ISD superindendent David Thweatt. In comments made to the Associated Press, and carried by the DMN (8/26/2008):
He (Thweatt) declined to say how many employees carry guns but said each one first must be approved by the board based on his or her personality and reaction to a crisis. In addition to training required for state concealed weapons license, they also must be trained to handle crisis intervention and hostage situations.
This is what I've been saying all along: State-mandated CHL training along is not sufficient to determine whether or not a CHL holder is prepared to carry in a school environment. In fact, Thweatt goes further by stating that the CHL vetting process isn't sufficient to determine how a CHL holder will react to a crisis.

Now, those of you who are still willing to condemn my position should also be willing to step up to the plate and condemn Thweatt's position as well. You can't have it both ways.
Ok, I'll step up to the plate, I condemn your position, and that of Thweatt, CHL's, based solely on their possession of same, should be allowed to carry in schools. No one knows how they will react in a crisis, not this one, nor the next, nor the one after that, and no test can adequately predict the reaction to any one particular crisis.

For the record, I wasn't trying to have it both ways anyway, I just dropped out of the thing because you were using too many anti-gun tactics and strategies, which I feel is dishonest, and didn't want to contribute to further devolution.
Move over a step and make room for one more. :thumbs2:

I guess brianko thinks his post of pure confirmation bias is his ticket home. :shock:

So much for this statement of his:
brianko wrote:
I've since modified my position, see previous posts.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 10:07 pm
by boomerang
boomerang wrote:
We're discussing CHL carry in schools, are we not?
Yes, and you've been asked repeatedly, and to this point refused to articulate *why* you're drawing an arbitrary distinction between carry in schools, and carry in malls, daycare facilities, office buildings, or anywhere else it is legal. Do you have a reason?
I'm interested in this question.

And is the answer different for colleges?
Anyone?

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 10:13 pm
by brianko
jimlongley wrote: For the record, I wasn't trying to have it both ways anyway, I just dropped out of the thing because you were using too many anti-gun tactics and strategies, which I feel is dishonest, and didn't want to contribute to further devolution.
I suppose if you consider "reasoned debate" an anti-gun tactic.

The "my way or the highway" mentality of some CHL holders is probably one of the factors that keeps more from joining our ranks.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 10:18 pm
by brianko
flintknapper wrote:
jimlongley wrote:
Ok, I'll step up to the plate, I condemn your position, and that of Thweatt, CHL's, based solely on their possession of same, should be allowed to carry in schools. No one knows how they will react in a crisis, not this one, nor the next, nor the one after that, and no test can adequately predict the reaction to any one particular crisis.
Move over a step and make room for one more. :thumbs2:
Quite a different response than the one you made here:
flintknapper wrote:
Excaliber wrote:Kudos to the first school district leadership I'm aware of that has had the courage to use logic on the facts and arrive at the obvious conclusion instead of repeating the same failed strategies over and over while expecting a different result.

:iagree:

Its truly a refreshing display of common sense!
So which is it? Do you condemn the Harrold ISD move, or do you applaud it? Now you've got me confused!

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 10:44 pm
by flintknapper
brianko wrote:
flintknapper wrote: Ok, I'll step up to the plate, I condemn your position, and that of Thweatt, CHL's, based solely on their possession of same, should be allowed to carry in schools. No one knows how they will react in a crisis, not this one, nor the next, nor the one after that, and no test can adequately predict the reaction to any one particular crisis.
Actually, that is "jimlongley's" quote not mine (perhaps a mistake on your part). It is my "highlight".


brianko wrote:
Quite a different response than the one you made here:
flintknapper wrote:
Excaliber wrote:Kudos to the first school district leadership I'm aware of that has had the courage to use logic on the facts and arrive at the obvious conclusion instead of repeating the same failed strategies over and over while expecting a different result.
:iagree:
Its truly a refreshing display of common sense!
Whats so difficult to understand about this. I agree there is a need for this school to have immediate means by which to protect themselves. Nearest LEO is 30 minutes away (remember).
So which is it? Do you condemn the Harrold ISD move, or do you applaud it?

Applaud and support it. Disagree that any special training outside of the State mandated training is necessary.
Now you've got me confused!
Yes, well...its such an easy thing to do, so I don't mind. ;-)

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 6:30 am
by brianko
flintknapper wrote: Actually, that is "jimlongley's" quote not mine (perhaps a mistake on your part). It is my "highlight".


Yes, it was a mistake on my part, since corrected.
So which is it? Do you condemn the Harrold ISD move, or do you applaud it?

Applaud and support it. Disagree that any special training outside of the State mandated training is necessary.
Thanks for the clarification. It's refreshing to see a spirit of compromise!
Now you've got me confused!
Yes, well...its such an easy thing to do, so I don't mind. ;-)
Luckily I've got my very own "surveillance team" available to make sure I don't stay in a confused state.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 7:21 am
by flintknapper
brianko wrote:
flintknapper wrote: Actually, that is "jimlongley's" quote not mine (perhaps a mistake on your part). It is my "highlight".


Yes, it was a mistake on my part, since corrected.
So which is it? Do you condemn the Harrold ISD move, or do you applaud it?

Applaud and support it. Disagree that any special training outside of the State mandated training is necessary.
Thanks for the clarification. It's refreshing to see a spirit of compromise!
Now you've got me confused!
Yes, well...its such an easy thing to do, so I don't mind. ;-)
Luckily I've got my very own "surveillance team" available to make sure I don't stay in a confused state.

Huh? What compromise? :???:

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:19 am
by anygunanywhere
Compromise to a 2A supporter means we lose.

Compromise to a 2A opponent means we lose.

Anygunanywhere

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:31 am
by jimlongley
brianko wrote:
jimlongley wrote: For the record, I wasn't trying to have it both ways anyway, I just dropped out of the thing because you were using too many anti-gun tactics and strategies, which I feel is dishonest, and didn't want to contribute to further devolution.
I suppose if you consider "reasoned debate" an anti-gun tactic.

The "my way or the highway" mentality of some CHL holders is probably one of the factors that keeps more from joining our ranks.
I don't consider that you have presented an reasoned debate.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Thu Aug 28, 2008 6:34 am
by lws380
I'm for carry at school by teachers. For the parents or those that are against it, I wonder how they feel about CHL's around their kids and parents (themselves) all the time. They (CHL's) are at churches, businesses, Wal-Mart, Dairy Queen, restauraunts, or just about everywhere. That is true in small towns and large towns. Is it ok for them that a CHL'er carriers at these locations?

So when a licensed carrier goes on a school campus they become more dangerous than at the Wal-mart (or wherever) where little Sally works?

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 6:43 pm
by ArmedTeacher
Wow, what a lively debate!

I am all for teachers carrying on campus.

I must admit that I am for further training as well. Isn't the point of training to be better prepared than you were before? Aren't teachers constantly going through staff development to be come better teachers? Why wouldn't anyone want more training to better equip them for such stressful and dangerous scenarios? Do we practice a fire drill once every five years and then hope that people know what's supposed to happen and how to handle themselves? No, we train and practice and practice and practice some more.

I have been through a school shooting before and I know exactly what happens and how it feels. I know how I reacted and what I was able to do. I know my skills and abilities. Even then, it helps to have some idea of what could happen. Training can only make the situation and your reaction better.

As for having a general CHL'ers allowable on campus, I have some reservations. I can just see the headlines now, "Teacher Shoots CHL Parent Mistaken as Gunman."

Regardless of whether teachers can carry, I would use anything I can to prevent an attacker from harming those in my charge.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 7:09 pm
by WildBill
ArmedTeacher wrote:Wow, what a lively debate! I am all for teachers carrying on campus. I must admit that I am for further training as well.

As for having a general CHL'ers allowable on campus, I have some reservations. I can just see the headlines now, "Teacher Shoots CHL Parent Mistaken as Gunman."
I understand your concerns. I am an advocate of training for all kinds of things, but when you start adding more and more requirements you might as well hire LEOs for every classroom. I guarantee you will see this headline: "Another School Massacre" much sooner and more often than your example.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 7:52 pm
by anygunanywhere
ArmedTeacher wrote: I can just see the headlines now, "Teacher Shoots CHL Parent Mistaken as Gunman."
So exactly how is a teacher going to mistake an individual carrying concealed as a gunman? I believe concealed here is the key word. Using your logic it would be just as likely for a parent carrying concealed to mistake a teacher for a crazed gunman and shoot the teacher.

Anygunanywhere

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 8:16 pm
by flintknapper
anygunanywhere wrote:
ArmedTeacher wrote: I can just see the headlines now, "Teacher Shoots CHL Parent Mistaken as Gunman."
So exactly how is a teacher going to mistake an individual carrying concealed as a gunman? I believe concealed here is the key word. Using your logic it would be just as likely for a parent carrying concealed to mistake a teacher for a crazed gunman and shoot the teacher.

Anygunanywhere
Not to mention that in neither case...is the mere "presence" of a gun a valid reason to shoot someone.

Re: TX. Teacher's rights to carry on campus.

Posted: Wed Sep 17, 2008 10:08 am
by mr.72
Not to mention that in neither case...is the mere "presence" of a gun a valid reason to shoot someone.
Right on, Flint. Of course we are all conditioned to believe that the only people who have guns are LEOs and bad guys. Certainly in a school, right now, one can fully expect that if you have a gun you are either the shooter, or you are in a police uniform.

I don't know how I missed this entire thread this long but it's funny to see it now for the first time. It is loaded with fallacies and clouded by basic differences in philosophy.

Just to stir the pot, some fallacies:

1. Schools present some unique environment or circumstance that normal CHL holders are not equipped to handle. This is a logical fallacy that makes for good propaganda because it actually contains some truth, while implying a conclusion that is completely false.

First truth: Schools present a unique environment (PERIOD). This is, of course, true. Also, my work place presents a unique environment. So does my home! Other unique environments include: rush hour traffic, the grocery store, a movie theater, a mall, 6th Street sidewalk on a Saturday night, etc. However, while this is true, it is a half-truth. It is a unique environment, but the teachers and staff of a school are also uniquely experienced and capable of decision-making inside this unique environment. Second half-truth: normal CHL holders are not equipped to handle the unique circumstance in a school. It may be true that a normal CHL holder who is not a school teacher or is not otherwise acclimated to the unique environment of a school may not be equipped to handle the circumstances necessary to make the right decisions in a school. The problem here is that the people whom are being denied their right to carry while at school are the very people who are perfectly well equipped to manage the situations in the school. A school teacher who is skilled at managing groups of children or teens, who understands their behavior intuitively, who is committed to their safety and education, is regularly charged with the protection of these children and they are extremely well-equipped to do so.

2. Professional law enforcement officers or some other uniquely trained category of armed professionals are properly equipped to handle situations such as those that may be present in schools. This again holds some truth, but leads to a false conclusion.

First of all, it is true that professional law enforcement or other security professionals have unique training of some kind. I would not expect them to be able to teach my kids algebra, or to write javascript, or manage my mutual fund, etc. Certainly since their profession is law enforcement and security, and they are expected to carry a gun and encounter other armed individuals on a daily basis as a part of their job, they are fully expected to have a unique area of expertise and experience, whether resulting from intentional training or just on the job experience. However, these professionals are not normally working in schools on a daily basis. They lack the experience of managing children in the school environment that teachers have. They may not be on the scene in time to intervene anyway. When they arrive on the scene, they are perhaps better trained to make some decisions or they have better techniques on hand to deal with certain circumstances but they are at a distinct disadvantage in terms of knowing by sight who are the students and faculty at the school, what is the floor plan and layout of the school, who is likely the shooter, etc. They do not naturally have the trust of the students and faculty built by relationship from working day in and day out with the rest of those at the school. There are a myriad of other reasons. It is conceded that they have some unique training, but this does not negate the unique experience and training that teachers and school staff have, and both areas of unique experience and training are applicable to the situation at hand in any school.

3. Introducing a large number of guns into a school campus will result in tragic accidents more often than it will result in increased safety. This fallacious argument is actually true right on its face, but it is based on a false premise.

The false premise is that if you were to remove the "gun free zone" restriction from schools, it would result in the introduction of a large number of guns into a school campus. Let's take that apart. The local high school in my area has about 1500 students and a student-to-teacher ratio of maybe 20. So let's say that's 75 teachers. There are other staff members at a school, let's be very generous and say that at this school, for every teacher there is at least one non-teacher staff member (cafeteria staff, janitorial, etc.). So that's 150. Now we have about 23 million people living in TX, and just rounding, let's say that's 12 million adults. Out of 12M adults who wold be eligible to get a CHL, there are 270,000. That's 2.25% of the adult population who have a CHL. Given the teachers + staff if a large high school at approximately 150 people, you can expect about 3 or 4 of them have a CHL. Certainly less than half of CHL holders actually carry, but let's say teachers and school staff are a special breed and 3 out of the 4 teachers who have a CHL are going to carry. So now in a campus populated by 1650 people, we have three guns being introduced, and three people to be concerned about making the right choices, keeping their guns secure, etc. Three.

4. One might support on-campus carry for teachers provided there was a mandated extra training beyond the CHL class for the teachers who are carrying. This is a fallacy on a few levels.

Firstly, no such training has been identified. All that is made clear is that the training that is deemed appropriate by the State of Texas for CHL in any environment other than a school (or other small number of venues) is insufficient. Therefore it is likely that whatever training is identified also may be subjected to the "inadequate" label.

Secondly, this is an argument based purely upon emotion and not at all upon fact or any tangible evidence. There is no documentary evidence that demonstrates that the TX CHL training is inadequate to qualify a person to carry a gun in any environment, and since CHL holders have not ever been allowed to carry in schools, there is no evidence to support the theory for schools either. In fact there is more documentary evidence to support the idea that even the TX CHL training is not necessary to improve safety, but is more viable as a tool to encourage the CHL holder to avoid running afoul of the law, even in its minutiae. So therefore if there is no evidence that the TX CHL training is is inadequate in any environment, then there is no rational reason to assume it is inadequate in a particular environment such as a school.

Thirdly, this argument makes some presumption that there is going to be a large number of CHL holders carrying at a school. However, my numeric example above demonstrates that it is highly unlikely that at any single public primary school in Texas will have a double digit number of CHL holders carrying a gun even if the restriction were entirely lifted.

Fourth, this argument is flatly unconstitutional.

Fifth, this argument is solely constructed as an open-ended barrier to allowing carry on campus, since the "adequate training" is never precisely defined (as in, this course, this number of hours, this % passing grade, etc.). So as long as a pie-in-the-sky magic training can be held up as a barrier to CHL on school campuses, then it shifts the argument away from anything logical, and instead pushes the debate towards "what constitutes adequate training". That is a moot question since there is never any evidence that any training would be adequate, nor that any could be beneficial.

And finally, this argument makes two basic, false assumptions: 1) without formal training of some sort, a person cannot be considered to be adequately trained, and 2) any training must be legally mandated in order for it to be utilized. I expect professional teachers to be conditioned to believe that formal instruction is the only way to become adequately trained. They live their entire lives according to the concept that some system (teachers, schools, etc.) is the only viable entity for the education of our population, and they rely upon the degree and certificate they have in order to identify themselves as "qualified" to do their jobs. So it is expected that in large part, this group of people would assume that only formalized training is sufficient. However there are a great many of us who are well aware that organized or institutionalized training does not always guarantee success, and self-initiated training and experience are often sufficient or even superior to some formalized training. So for example, just because a teacher has not gone to a training class on how to deal with a shooting incident in a school does not mean that they are incapable of making the right choices under those circumstances.

Of course, the legal requirement, well that's a difference in philosophy.

On the other side of the debate, I think we have some basic logic:

1. The number of CHL holders in the general population is approximately 2% of adults. Thus the number of people we are talking about carrying at any school is incredibly small

2. There is no documented evidence that the introduction of CHL holders carrying in any venue actually increases the risk of a firearms-related injury or death

3. There is no viable reason to suspect that teachers are any less capable of rational choices and good judgment than the rest of the population, so there is no reason to restrict their rights to carry any more than you would restrict the rights of those in any other profession

4. Teachers have the same right to self-defense as do the rest of us, and they are being deprived that basic right while they are in school.

My personal opinion is that employers should not be allowed to restrict CHL holders from carrying while they are at work, regardless of whether it is a school or private business. I understand this is both not the current law, as well as being an unpopular opinion.

At present, public schools are a coercive monopoly, and this mandate on school carry laws applies to all schools. Since every single school in TX is a "gun free zone" requiring special authorization for CHL holders to carry while on campus (including the Harrold school district, which allows such special authorization), then essentially an entire class of workers are being denied their right to self defense. While I may disagree with my company's policy about carrying at work, I can quit my job here and go get another job somewhere else as an engineer. However, if I were a school teacher, I could not quit my job and go get another job as a school teacher and be allowed to carry. Likewise, education of children in Texas is compulsory, so besides home-schooling your children, parents are forced by law to deliver their children daily to a facility which legally prevents the legal defense of a third party by CHL holders. My children are home-schooled. However, most public school kids are sitting ducks. I am not just concerned with "active shooters" but also with any other type of violent crime that might take place in a school.

These schools are truly "rights-free" zones, where students, teachers and staff are subjected to a social experiment where Utopian ideals are applied to a non-Utopian population. This applies to guns policy as well as a myriad of other things in schools that would be way off-topic for this forum.