Why I Support Arming Teachers

After a great deal of thought, I’ve come to the conclusion that I support allowing teachers and school administrations to get the certifications needed to conceal carry (hidden) firearms as civilians, rather then as law enforcement in classrooms and school grounds. Here are some reasons why:

  1. Concealed carry holders go through training and are knowledgeable about firearms. This is important in a mass shooting situation. People who don’t know the ins and outs of firearms often are afraid and unthinking should a situation occur. Many people unfamiliar with firearms believe many things that are untrue about firearms, and may make stupid decisions in an emergency situation involving a firearm.
  2. A corollary to that point is that concealed carry holders are more able to judge the intent of somebody with a firearm. Sometimes a panicky person who doesn’t understand guns might do something that could make a situation more dangerous then it otherwise would be. Being able to think and provide a rational response during a situation, and avoiding escalation can help to save lives.
  3. A person carrying a firearm for defense is going to be a high alert and more aware of his or her surrounding, as most concealed carry classes teach. Having greater situational awareness by teachers and school administration can help defuse situations before they become problematic.
  4. Concealed carriers in school districts are anonymous civilians in plain clothes. Modern concealed carrying holsters are very discrete, and those with the training with no techniques to ensure nobody finds out if they are carrying. Students, parents, the media, and potential attackers and others would have no idea who is carrying or who is not. This makes it safer, as a potential criminal would have no idea while not creating a sense of fear in the classroom.
  5. Training for concealed carrying teachers and school administrators is a low-cost proposition compared to more school resource officers. It doesn’t militarize our schools or put on a show of force, instead it provides a way for civilian professionals who work in these schools to be better observers of what is happening around them, and take steps in an emergency to help better keep them safe.
  6. I am doubtful that a concealed carry teacher or school administrator could shoot back in an emergency situation, as many would envision. That’s not a realistic thing with a tiny, inaccurate concealed handgun compared to a high-powered deer rifle or modern sporting rifle used for coyote hunting. But a teacher or school administrator knowledgeable about firearms and in an heightened sense of awareness because of them carrying, could better spot things, take defensive measures and alert authorities with the big guns to come in and neutralize the threat.

In contrast, I don’t support increasing school resource officers, which are police officers that are assigned to school duty. We don’t need more criminalization of school age students, but we do need to keep them safe. It’s fine to have school administrators monitoring hallways from security centers, but we don’t need a show of force unless absolutely needed. Incidents should be addressed in as low-profile away as possible, to avoid interrupting the school day. We shouldn’t turn our schools into forts or prisons, but use hidden security like small spy camerasΒ  embedded into walls and sensors that are completely invisible to students and the general public but provide monitoring and safety for school district.

The best security is often the most hidden security. Security that isn’t widely known, and place randomly enough that it isn’t easy to guess or figure out. Low-tech security like mirrors, straighter hallways, brighter lighting can also help. Criminals don’t like to be observed, they fear being caught before they can do their harm. Better building design works hand and hand with having more watchful eyes and plain-clothes professionals on high alert, keeping an eye on their surroundings. It can’t be repeated enough, that a show of force, isn’t really an effective form of security.

For too long, we’ve relied too heavily on police officers and the state to keep people safe, while ignoring the role that the average civilian could have in keeping our society safe. But let’s be honest, 80 year old grandmothers looking out their windows have stopped a lot of crime over the year — either by yelling at the kids to knock it off with their bb-guns shooting thing they shouldn’t be or calling the police when they see a house being broken into. Average citizens have a big role to crime prevention and providing violence.

Law enforcement is very expensive to taxpayers and has the full power of the state to go after individuals, when a simple conversation or observant individual citizens can be often much effective at resolving an issue then calling the police. Allow teachers and school administrators that want they privilege to take the training and become the watchful eyes we need in our schools to keep them safe.

February 25, 2018 Morning

Good morning! Happy Sunday. β›ͺβ›ͺβ›ͺNext Sunday is the Average High is 40.😎 Two weeks until Daylight Savings Time.🌄 If that’s not a sign that spring is coming, I don’t know what is. A very cold rain and 37 degrees in Delmar, NY. 💦There is a southeast breeze at 14 mph. Going to be a wet one today but at least it will be above freezing. The skies will clear around 9 pm.

🌻Only 23 days remain until the first day of calendar spring!🌻

Today will be a cold and rainy day. β˜”High of 39 degrees at 2pm. Two degrees above normal. Southeast wind 8 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. Total daytime sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible. A year ago, we had mostly cloudy skies. The high last year was 70 degrees.🌞 The record high was set in 2017. 16.8 inches of snow fell back in 1966.❄

The sun will set at 5:40 pm with dusk around 6:09 pm, which is one minute and 15 seconds later than yesterday. 🌅At sunset, look for mostly cloudy conditions and 38 degrees. There will be a south-southeast breeze at 7 mph. Today will have 11 hours and 5 minutes of daytime, a decrease of 2 minutes and 50 seconds over yesterday.

Tonight will be mostly cloudy, with a low of 31 degrees at 6am. β˜β˜11 degrees above normal. Southeast wind around 6 mph becoming light and variable. In 2017, we had thunderstorm rain in the evening, which became light snow by the early hours of the morning. It got down to 24 degrees. The record low of -11 occurred back in 1950.

Yesterday was the Save the Pine Bush Hike at the Albany Pine Bush Preserve. 🌲🌲🌲🐉🐝🐞It was a nice hike, we explored the Truax Barriens trail, which was similiar to what we did the previous month, but a bit shorter because I and some other people had things to do in the afternoon.

After the hike, I met Mom and my sister and neice for lunch at the Yonder Farms in Karner. 🍔🍪Lynne Jackson and Hugh Jonhson were also having lunch there after the hike. It also is my dad’s birthday so happy birthday to him. 🎂🎂

After lunch, I took mom to the grocery store in Greenville to help her with her weekly shop. 👜👜It was nice seeing the old town where I grew up but much has changed over the past twenty years.🗻🗻🏦🏫 I tell you I love those 🐷🐮🐂🐃mountains and the small town life, maybe doing some hobby farming like people out there do, but not in NY with the all the stupid gun laws🔫 and the burn ban. 🔥🚫

I thought about going hiking up Bennett Hill in the afternoon,β—»🏃 but I shelved that plan when I discovered the battery on my phone was almost dead. 🐮📱🔋I also was tired as I got up early for the hike and I didn’t sleep well the previous night.

When I got home I ended up working on building a small board for my GPS tracker,🔬📺🌠🌎 connecting most of the wires just using dupont cables, and putting the whole unit in a small sandwitch box. Doesn’t need to be pretty, as it’s just going to get tucked in a box under the seat in my truck. I added and improved some of the recording functions, including adding a recording function for the grade I was climbing, distance traveled in the trip, distance from home, and acceleration. Neat stuff for graphing and other purposes. Should be great for looking back on my trips.

I also spend a bunch of time working with the 24LC256 chip 💻that I bought for adding memory storage to some of my projects. It works well, although I need to prefect the code relating to storing data structures on the device. But I will do that in my free time in the coming weeks, as winter really isn’t over yet.

Cleaned out the bathtub, which was getting super gross once again from the from the mildew, 🛀🛀🙊and then the kitchen counters and stove top. Swept the floor. Need to take the recycable paper to the recycling dumpers at the transfer station today🚮💠, and maybe start loading bottles and cans in the back of my pickup for eventual haul to the transfer station, as my trash cans are getting pretty full. Usually make one big trip each March or early April, as in the summer, I have much less trash when I’m camping.β›Ί

I’m hopeful now that next weekend is March, that soon I’ll be able to get out camping again.β›Ί It will depend a lot on the weather and my work schedule. Sometimes I have to go into the office on weekends during March, because that’s one of the busiest times of the year.  🌃Long nigths in the wilderness are great, next to a roaring fire, of course assuming that winter finally comes to an end with warmer spring temperatures, not too much of a wildfire risk, but not so soggy either.

Well folks, I should get going as soon I need to head to the store, 🍉🍎🌽🍟🍄🍲before I go to my parents house for the afternoon. I have to get there a bit earlier then some weeks, but that’s fine as hopefully I will get home relatively early this evening.

As previously noted, next Sunday is Average High is 40 😎when the sun will be setting at 5:49 pm with dusk at 6:17 pm. On that day in 2017, we had partly cloudy skies and temperatures between 23 and 8 degrees. We hit a record high of 59 back in 1919.