Many people have been trying to understand what the local, state, and federal police did after they arrived at the Robb Elementary School while an active shooter was killing children and teachers. And they wonder about conflicting accounts from officials.
The editorial board of the Washington Post says that Governor Abbott of Texas must create an independent commission. Frankly, Governor Abbott is so pro-gun that it’s hard to imagine that any commission appointed by him would produce anything but a whitewash of his vicious policies, which made it legal for an 18-year-old to buy military assault weapons and to carry them openly. His actions and policies should be part of an independent investigation, and that is not likely to happen if he chooses the commission members.
What’s needed in Uvalde, Texas, is a credible investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI.
The editorial board writes:
When police in Littleton, Colo., responded to reports of gunfire at Columbine High School in 1999, they did what they had been trained to do: set up a perimeter, summon specially trained SWAT and hostage teams, wait for demands and allow no one, including first responders, into the building. Hours passed before the building was secured, authorities realized the shooters had killed themselves, and the wounded received medical attention. Thirteen people — 12 students and a teacher — had been slaughtered.
Columbine resulted in fundamental changes in how law enforcement responds to mass shootings. The Columbine Review Commission formed by then-Gov. Bill Owens recommended in 2001 that “law enforcement policy and training should emphasize that the highest priority of law enforcement officers, after arriving at the scene of a crisis, is to stop any ongoing assault.” Active-shooter programs in which officers were trained to immediately target the gunman or gunmen became standard police protocol.
So why did it take 40 minutes to an hour before law enforcement authorities in Uvalde, Tex., stormed an elementary school classroom to stop a gunman who had gone on a shooting rampage? It is just one of the questions that parents whose children were killed, wounded or traumatized are asking — and it is one that authorities would do well to answer with clarity and urgency.
Since Tuesday’s mass shooting at Robb Elementary School, in which 19 children and two teachers were murdered, conflicting and confusing narratives have emerged. After initial accounts that the gunman had been confronted by a school resource officer and suggestions that there was an exchange of gunfire, a Texas law enforcement officer said on Thursday that the gunman entered the school “unobstructed” through a door that was apparently unlocked. Victor Escalon, a regional director at the Texas Department of Public Safety, said that Salvador Rolando Ramos, the alleged gunman who was killed when a Border Patrol tactical team burst into the room where he had been barricaded, did not initially encounter any law enforcement officers. Why the discrepancy?
Equally troubling is a harrowing video posted to a parent’s Facebook account that shows frantic family members on Tuesday begging police to take action. “Why let the children die? There’s shooting in there,” one woman pleaded. “They’re little kids, they don’t know how to defend themselves. … Six-year-old kids in there, they don’t know how to defend themselves from a shooter!” a man cried. Parents talked about rushing the building themselves, as they said police were just standing around. One parent was tackled to the ground. A national school safety expert told Post reporters that any delay in going inside will be hard to explain.
Make no mistake: The person responsible for the murder of these little children and brave teachers is the deranged 18-year-old who fired an AR-style rifle. But it is important to know whether errors were made that might have cost some lives. What lessons can be learned that might save lives in the future if — as sadly seems inevitable — there are more mass shootings? There needs to be a full public accounting. Just as the governor in Colorado once ordered a rigorous review of the events surrounding Columbine, so should Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

Does it, by any chance, have something to do with racial attitude? Some of the names I’ve read are Latino…
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In related news, at least 2 children (maybe more) survived the slaughter in the classroom. Both kids pretended to be dead and one of them covered herself in the blood of a slain classmate! This is like something out of war-torn countries like Ukraine or Syria.
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The chief of the Uvalde police claimed that his officers did not have equipment and weapons to confront someone with an AR 15 rifle. In a town where about 40% of the budget goes to law enforcement, the people should demand accountability for this bungled operation. It has also been revealed that Uvalde had its own SWAT team that trained in the schools in 2020. Why were they not deployed to protect the children of the community? https://www.vice.com/en/article/wxdwgn/uvalde-swat-team-bragged-about-training-at-schools-on-facebook
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Wow, what a lame excuse from the police. They don’t have the equipment or weapons? What the hay, they outnumber the shooter, they have semi-automatic handguns and rifles or are we to believe they are unarmed like British bobbies?
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Which Chief was in charge? The Chief of Police of Uvalde CISD Education Foundation or the Police Chief of Uvalde? Arredondo or Rodriguez?
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It was on NBC Evening News, but it was the Texas safety officer that was making the claims, not a chief of police, my mistake. https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news-netcast/video/nightly-news-full-broadcast-may-26th-140921413920
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Maybe they need a third Chief to act as the Chief of Chiefs
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The Chief of Chiefs of Police
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The name now being put out on CNN is Arredondo
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“The chief of the Uvalde police claimed that his officers did not have equipment and weapons to confront someone with an AR 15 rifle.”
I would have thought, in (Freedom Champion and Red Blood) TX every single person has equipment and weapons to confront someone with an AR15, let alone the police.
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The four things I expect every person in Texas to have:
An assault rifle
Body armor
A cowboy hat
Cowboy boots
I guess that’s give if you consider each bolt to be one thing
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The one thing I expect autocorrect not to have: the ability to not mangle correctly spelled words (five and boot)
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The one thing I expect a person in Texas not to have:
A clue
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2nd Amendment fraud: http://www.milwaukeeindependent.com/syndicated/warren-burger-and-nra-gun-lobbys-big-fraud-on-second-amendment/
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I think the answer is simple.
What happened and happens in Colorado (that I understand is now a Democratic stronghold), doesn’t affect conservative Blood Red Texas.
Conservative Blood Red Texas is different.
Conservative Blood Red Texas is special.
Conservative Blood Red Texans are Unique.
Conservative Blood Red Texas stands above the rest.
Conservative Blood Red Texans are tough enough to stand alone.
At least that what I’ve learned about conservatives Blood Red Texas all my life from conservative Blood Red Texans is that conservative Blood Red Texas is almost a country within a country.
Conservative Blood Red Texas even has its own power grid that isn’t connected to any other state.
And because conservative Blood Red Texas has its own power grid, it has been estimated that 246 Texans died from an unexpected winter storm caused freezing temperatures that knocked that independent power grid off line.
https://www.texastribune.org/2022/01/02/texas-winter-storm-final-death-toll-246/
And according to the same media news source, conservative Blood Red Texas hasn’t done enough to make sure that will not happen again.
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/11/29/texas-power-grid-winter-storm/
The only way Texas might do something different to make sure the power grid won’t fail again and children in public schools are safer is if Texas turns dramatically BLUE in 2022 or 2024. But the fix won’t happen overnight. It will take years to change this state from a fascist Blood Red stronghold into a democracy again.
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What happened when schools were academic Disneyland , substituting reading , drawing , literature and friends for adrenaline raising rides ?
What happened to the laughter that permeated hallways and classrooms ?
What happened to the amazing learning that took place and fascinated everyone?
What happened to the school that I grew up with and knew and loved ?
Marc Rogers
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A “cartoon” in the paper today: little boy hugging mom–
“Can we go back to homeschooling?”
One advantage to pandemic remote learning (although the obvious was to avoid a wave of infections) was that there were no students in schools to shoot & kill.
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Not to minimize the horrific nature of what just happened , but even in years with several mass shootings, far more kids die from guns outside school each year than from shootings in school.
The mass shootings get a lot of media exposure while the deaths outside school are largely a silent epidemic.
“Guns kill more U.S. kids than cancer. This emergency physician aims to prevent those firearm deaths”
https://www.science.org/content/article/guns-kill-more-us-kids-cancer-emergency-physician-aims-prevent-those-firearm-deaths
Of course, those gun deaths outside school were occurring before the pandemic and one would have to do some analysis to determine if the pandemic had any significant impact on the yearly number.
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What you’ve written doesn’t fit the GOP narrative.
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