Tag Archives: Ending Massacres for Good

Ending Massacres for Good

The Knox Report

From the Firearms Coalition

 

Ending Massacres for Good

 

By Jeff Knox

 

(Manassas, VA, April 17, 2007)  Thirty two students and faculty members of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University were brutally murdered on April 16.  The story attracted massive media attention all over the world.  Not the worst school massacre in U.S. history, but the most deadly school shooting (the worst used bombs not guns).  In the aftermath, a serious concern is the history says such highly publicized criminal acts generate copycat crimes; the greater the media coverage, the more copycats, and they may take years to act.  Every parent of college students in the United States, and every student, needs to be thinking about that fact and devising action plans. 

No gun control law, no campus alert system, no increased police presence, buddy-system walking plan, or emergency call-box can stop a killer committed to the idea of immortalizing himself through murder.  The only gun law which might have mitigated the carnage at Virginia Tech was a law rejected at the urging of school administrators in the past two sessions of the Virginia Legislature:  a law forbidding state colleges and universities to prohibit lawful firearms possession on their campuses.

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