Christopher Cotton is a high school English teacher in Shaker Heights, Ohio.
He wrote this article for the school newspaper.
He writes:
The pattern of responses to school shootings is maddeningly familiar: carnage, thoughts and prayers, too soon to talk, don’t politicize, stalling, relegating, forgetting. People who support some sort of common-sense gun restrictions — the vast majority of Americans — have been driven to near-insanity by the impotence of our legislators. We thought Columbine might force a change. We were sure that Sandy Hook, with its young victims, would be the tipping point. But America fell into the same pattern.
Now there is something new under the sun.
What’s new is: YOU.
We adults have utterly failed to budge Washington’s inertia. But you students have a unique moral authority on this issue. You are the ones who pay the price. You are the ones who have to live or die with the results of Congress’ prostration to the gun lobby. As we have seen with news footage and viral videos, when teenagers speak up on this issue they cannot be shouted down. They have a clarity and authority that utterly dissipates the smog that befouls our political discourse.
I’ve seen legislators hamstrung by that mantra, “It’s too soon to talk about gun restrictions.” I’ve never heard an effective response; the argument has taken on the force of self-evident truth. But now I’ve seen a teenager pop that balloon with a single piece of common sense: “It’s not too soon. It’s too late.”
Teachers care, but the legislators ignore them. Oh, it’s just those unions, looking for smaller classes or other privileges.
Parents care, but they are not organized.
Administrators care, but they have to worry about their school’s public relations.
Students care, and they are not afraid. They are idealistic. They want fairness. They want justice. They have energy. They have not been beaten down by the system. No one can accuse them of being self-interested, unless self-interest means you hope to stay alive.

Students who are leading this movement have everything to gain and nothing to lose. All power to them and adults who are aiding and abetting their cause.
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Off topic for this post but CRITICAL NEWS: I just heard a story on WBEZ (Morning Edition, 3rd hour?) on how the gun industry has achieved market saturation, that sales are way down since there’s no Obama or Hilary to fear monger with, that their stock values have plummeted, AND, that Smith and Wesson has filed for bankruptcy protection! Those guys are not going away, just doing a Trump and trying not to pay their bills. Sorry, no link yet, it’s hard to dig them out from the whole show the segment was on. The bottom line here is that THIS decline in sales and stock value is the most rational, in fact the only real explanation for the cynical push to arm teachers, the gun industry needs to open a new, virgin market to keep the cash flow going, and our schools and teachers are it. The actual gun and accessory/ammo sales are just the tip of the iceberg here, the real cash cow is the cost of all the ongoing training, which IS NOT OPTIONAL if you are at all serious about being able to defend your school. Even if well trained, you will not prevail in a gunfight if a determined shooter decides to wear body armor, especially if it is full body armor as was worn by a pair of bank robbers years back who were not slowed down in any way in spite of being hit with multiple handgun rounds fired by the police before their heavier weapons could be deployed. No body armor? No problem! A rifle has far greater effective range than a handgun, so all a shooter has to do is take up a firing position away from the school and attack in the morning or during dismissal, bringing parents into the victim pool as well. The idea of arming teachers and/or school staff is preposterously stupid and will not increase school security one bit.
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A friend posted the link. Here you go! https://www.npr.org/2018/02/27/589061976/for-the-first-time-in-years-shops-have-more-guns-than-buyers
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Thank you, Jon. Ah … need more buyers so sell the guns to schools.
How about this? Gun owners must pay a tax for the protection of those who don’t have guns.
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“…The actual gun and accessory/ammo sales are just the tip of the iceberg here, the real cash cow is the cost of all the ongoing training, which IS NOT OPTIONAL” — it sounds so very much like the test-score game where prescripted programs have been forced into schools attached to ENDLESS teacher trainings/meetings/conferences/observations. PREPOSTEROUSLY stupid, and will not increase school security, but, my will it make those who look to profit from this game RICH. ChaChing.
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I hope that this generation gets as activated as the hippie generation. In my canvassing efforts with Swing Left, I find that most of my fellow volunteers are 65 and older — Baby Boomers –old hippies. Not a lot from my generation (Gen X), or other younger generations. The Baby Boomers developed the habit of political activism; subsequent generations, not so much.
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Hope so too, ponderosa.
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