Betsy DeVos Considers Allowing Schools To Arm Teachers Using Federal Funds

BAILEY T. STEEN | FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 2018

U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is quite a wild wild west character. In the mind of this would-be-gunslinger, where a bullet lays behind every corner of American life, the plan for safety is simply fighting fire with fire. It should have came as no surprise when The New York Times and The Washington Post revealed her latest bright idea: allowing federal education funds to go towards more guns in the hands of the nationâs teachers.
What could possibly go wrong? Besides the DOEâs trampling over established tax protocols and legal precedent, of course. In 2015, Congressional lawmakers passed whatâs known as The Student Support and Academic Enrichment Grants (SSAEG), the $1B education fund intended to enrich impoverished American schools with access to mental health treatments, technological innovation, artistic ventures, various means that specifically enable academic opportunities. In an unprecedented move by the government, this enrichment now includes arms sales â a reversal of longstanding laws that prevent school funds going towards weaponry.
In fact, TIME cited the recent case of The STOP School Violence Act, a piece of domestic security legislation from early March, which allocated $50M a year towards the nationâs public school districts so long as funds arenât invested in firearms. Due to that gridlock, this particular pool of money is being left untouched. The same canât be said of these SSAEG funds, which were passed through Congress under The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).
Instead, the government is trying to argue that, due to the unspecified nature of SSAEG on gun restrictions, thereâs simply not enough there to stop DeVos of seeing her anarcho-libertarian gun-filled playgrounds come to life. The reason for these gun sale omissions being that nobody in their right fucking mind would have believed that society would reach the point of whether itâs right to arm or not to arm. Now that is the (ridiculous) question.
Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), who wrote ESSA into law, didnât mince words:
âWhen Republicans and Democrats came together to pass the bipartisan Every Student Succeeds Act, we were clear that these grants were intended to help foster safe, healthy and supportive environments that improve student learning â not prop up the N.R.A. and gun sales,â Ms. Murray said in a statement provided to The Times.
She was joined by a rejection of the proposal by Sen. Chris Murphyâ (D-CT):
âMy lord â we canât let this happen,â Murphy said.
The government claims it isnât happening. Following the scandal surrounding GOP devotees and notorious comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, who recently tricked gun-rights activists into supporting child soldier programs intended for those over three years old on his series âWho Is Americaâ, itâs understandable why the government remains hush on initiatives alining children with firearms.
âThe department is constantly considering and evaluating policy issues, particularly issues related to school safety,â Liz Hill, a spokeswoman for the Education Department, told The Times. âThe secretary nor the department issues opinions on hypothetical scenarios.â
But this hasnât stopped multiple inside sources within the DOE issuing leaks of their pro-gun plans to the press, however. These department officials, supposedly protected under anonymity, told The Times itâll be the first time the government will âhave authorized the purchase of weapons without a congressional mandateâ, according to their internal discussions.
They argue the programâs cited âdrug and violence preventionâ could be a tough narrative to spin for the Trump administration. Itâs likely theyâll simply just polish off the NRA talking point of âthe only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is with a good guy with a gunâ and just file this under their âimproving school conditionsâ obligation. The evidence suggests a guns-in-schools plan will only result in a more dangerous environment, not safer. Just examine any olâ study which finds: Where there are more guns, there are more gun deaths.

According to a recent Vox investigation, âmass shootings actually make up a small fraction of Americaâs gun deaths, constituting less than 2 percent of such deaths in 2013â. They continue to cite a recent CNN story which found that âthe US makes up less than 5% of the worldâs population, but holds 31% of global mass shooters.â
If weâre to appeal to those ârace realistsâ, who frequently cite truthful issues with the U.S. black community â that notorious 13 percent of the population who committed around 52 percent of homicides, according to the US Census Bureau â you must also admit that being only 5% of the world and nearly a third of all of its mass shooters is a problem. Itâs just some uncomfortable feature to be ignored, but an example of normalising war.
Consider that same Vox investigation found among the countries and territories with the highest numbers of civilian firearms, the U.S.â next competition is Yemen â yes, that failed state of a country thatâs currently embroiled in both civil wars between Islamist-Jihadist factions and forced famines at the hands of imperialist foreign policy. The analysis, brough forth by The Small Arms, doesnât paint America as that shining city on a hill. Unless the shine is from persistent gunfire.

âWithin the United States, a wide array of empirical evidence indicates that more guns in a community leads to more homicide,â David Hemenway, the Injury Control Research Centerâs director, wrote in the book Private Guns, Public Health. This is supported by a cited 2013 study by a Boston University School of Public Health researcher which found that, âafter controlling for multiple variablesâ, each percentage point increase in gun ownership correlated with a roughly 0.9 percent rise in the firearm homicide rate.
It shouldnât need to be debated that if you aim for the wild wild west, youâre going to have the wild wild west. If youâre a principled conservative or libertarian who shrugs and calls this the price of individual freedoms, thatâs a tenable position we can debate. You lose respect when you canât admit freedom is a messy reality to bare. Otherwise those weapons sales will be locked and loaded with your money in just a matter of time.

Thanks for reading!
Bailey T. Steen is a journalist, designer and film critic residing in the heart of Victoria, Australia. Heâs also a proud Putin Puppet⢠on occasion.
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Cheers, darlings!! đ