COLUMBINE SURVIVOR INTRODUCES LEGISLATION TO PUSH FOR MORE GUNS, NOT LESS

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COLUMBINE SURVIVOR INTRODUCES LEGISLATION TO PUSH FOR MORE GUNS, 
NOT LESS
BY RAVEN CLABOUGH
republished below in full unedited for informational, educational, and research purposes:
 
The Left has been using the victims and families of the Parkland,
Florida, shooting to advocate for more gun control, and in some extreme
cases, to call for an all-out repeal of the Second Amendment. But not
all survivors of mass shootings agree that gun control is the
appropriate response to school shootings. Colorado House Minority Leader
Patrick Neville, a former student of Columbine High School during the
1999 mass shooting, has once again introduced legislation to remove
limitations on concealed carry in K-12 schools.

According to the Washington Times, Neville has introduced
the bill annually since he was elected in 2014, asserting that the
current law “creates a so-called gun free zone in every K-12 public
school,” making students and teachers easy targets.


“This act would allow every law-abiding citizen who holds a concealed
carry permit, issued from their chief law-enforcement officer, the
right to carry concealed in order to defend themselves and most
importantly our children from the worst-case scenarios,” Neville said in
a statement.

Neville’s response to the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School mass
shooting is far different from the typical knee-jerk reaction seen among
the Left and the mainstream media following mass shootings.

“As a former Columbine student who was a sophomore during the
shootings on April 20, 1999, I will do everything in my power to prevent
Colorado families from enduring the hardships my classmates and I faced
that day,” Neville said. “Time and time again we point to the one
common theme with mass shootings: they occur in gun-free zones.”

Neville understands that more guns in the hands of law-abiding
citizens will go a long way in helping to stop would-be mass shooters.
Conservative pundit Ann Coulter observes,
“Thanks to our Second Amendment, the United States has fewer mass
shootings per capita than many other developed countries, including
Norway, France, Switzerland, Finland, Belgium and the Czech Republic.
(And 98 percent of our mass shootings occur in ‘gun-free zones.’)”

But these facts do not fit in with the Left’s narrative about gun
safety and rights. Conservative pundit Ben Shapiro notes that the Left
often resorts to victim identity politics to advance legislation that
would otherwise be unpopular. It has become a regular activity of the
Left to trot out victims of gun violence to make emotional but overly
simplistic pleas about gun control. Nearly all major media outlets seem
to have featured commentary from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School
students. Some of the school’s shooting survivors are feeding right into
the Left’s ploys by leading a March for Our Lives rally in Washington,
D.C., on March 24.

The problem, of course, is that while these students are certainly
sympathetic speakers, their impassioned pleas are full of emotion and
devoid of fact. For example, one student, Emma Gonzalez, gave a gun
control speech last
week that was highlighted by CNN in which she argued that it was
“harder to make plans with friends on weekends than to buy an automatic
or semi-automatic weapon,” a statement that is simply untrue.

What’s worse is that these survivors are being manipulated by the
mainstream media and the Left and likely do not even realize it, and any
students who refuse to stick to the Left’s anti-gun narrative are left
behind.

According to Colton Haab, an ROTC student at Stoneman Douglas High
School who helped usher students to safety, Wednesday’s CNN town hall
event on the school shooting entitled “Stand Up: The Students of
Stoneman Douglas Demand Action” was scripted. Haab says he was censored from asking questions other than the ones that were provided by the station.

“CNN had originally asked me to write a speech and questions and it ended up being all scripted,” Haab told WPLG-TV.

Haab explained that he wrote questions that addressed school safety
and wanted to suggest using veterans to help protect schools, but that
was unacceptable to the network.

It was clear that the town hall was overwhelmingly stacked with anti-gun zealots. Two students hand-picked by CNN openly attacked National Rifle Association spokesperson Dana Loesch as a bad mother while moderator Jake Tapper sat in silence.

Using emotional victims to push policy never paves the way for constructive policy debate. Shapiro expounds on this for the Daily Wire:

Good policy is good regardless of timing;
bad policy is bad regardless of timing. But when something horrific
occurs, it’s in the interest of those pushing a related policy to
suggest that those who oppose the policy somehow don’t care enough about
victims. We heard this from gun control advocates after Sandy Hook,
after Pulse, after Virginia Tech, after Columbine — after every mass
shooting. Passion doesn’t make policy good or worthwhile. And injecting
emotional accusations into the process never makes policy — or the
country — better. Usually such accusations merely end with more
heavyhanded government policy that doesn’t actually achieve the end for
which it supposedly aims.

For the same reasons the American Medical Association’s Code of
Medical Ethics states that physicians should not treat themselves or
members of their immediate families in fear that emotions will cloud
their judgment, victims should not be treated as unbiased resources for
policy proposals immediately following the events in which they were
victimized.