School Shooters In Texas Will Now Think Twice About Shooting Up a School After What They Face Off Ag

School Shooters In Texas Will Now Think Twice About Shooting Up a School After What They Face-Off Against

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Anyone thinkig about s******g up a school in Texas will have to think twice about the opposition they’re likely to face if they make it that far. After the recent slew of incidents involving violence at schools, there are some politicians who are working toward new solutions to help make school safer. Various laws, rules adjustments in schools, and adjustments are being considered. Some of the new suggestions involve one of the most common sense solutions which has Governor Greg Abbott wanting more armed personnel inside the school buildings.

Abbot is considering hiring American armed forces veterans to help with school safety. It’s been proven that many schools with armed guards or police officers suffer less s******g incidents or the incidents are much smaller than that of what happened in places like Parkland, Florida. However, that is with the exception of the Broward police, who proved to be cowards as they let their students perish while standing around outside not doing anything.

Many people who look to commit a school s******g often target a school when it is unguarded and not protected. Common sense says that every school should have armed police. Airports and other important places have it, so why not schools? There’s a lot in the new Texas plan for safety, some things many other states might want to discuss.

The Texas Tribune went into more detail:
“Gov. Greg Abbott’s suggestions for limiting mass s******g deaths in Texas include a bevy of changes to state law, a culture shift in how law enforcement officers patrol their communities, increases in mental health practices at schools and help for educators who want to improve their abilities to remove potentially dangerous students from classrooms.
Here’s what you need to know about the 40-page “School and Firearm Safety Action Plan” that Abbott released in Dallas on Wednesday.

While Abbott’s plan doesn’t call for any new state statutes that directly limit who can buy g**s, it does aim to close some loopholes in laws that already bar some people from purchasing or owning firearms. And it does call for lawmakers to strengthen existing criminal penalties for some people whose g**s are used to injure or k**l people.

“I can assure you I will never allow Second Amendment rights to be infringed, but I will always promote responsible g*n ownership,” Abbott said Wednesday.

The governor wants courts to report felony convictions, mental health adjudications and protective orders that can block people from buying g**s within 48 hours instead of 30 days.
In Texas, parents can be criminally prosecuted if they don’t safely store loaded g**s that end up being used in certain crimes by children who are 16 years old and younger. Abbott wants to include 17-year-olds in that law, remove the provision that only allows for prosecution if the g**s were loaded when children accessed them and increase the criminal penalty from a Class A misdemeanor to a third degree felony. The plan also calls for requiring g*n owners to report when their firearms are lost or stolen.

The plan mentions a potential “red flag” law that would allow judges to temporarily take g**s away from people deemed to be dangerous if there is legal due process. Abbott didn’t call for legislators to pass such a law — he instead wants to “encourage” lawmakers to “consider the merits” of adopting it. Outgoing House Speaker Joe Straus took him up on that late Wednesday and instructed a committee of the lower chamber to study such legal provisions.

“In the coming days, I will issue other interim charges designed to help prevent another school s******g,” Straus said in a prepared statement.

Abbott’s proposal also calls for encouraging voluntary use of g*n locks. It mentions that Ohio requires dealers to also sell access prevention devices and that Maine requires dealers to demonstrate how to use trigger lock devices. The plan says “Texas could emulate these laws,” but does not list them as an explicit recommendation for lawmakers.

The safety action plan says that schools and local law enforcement agencies should work closer together to increase how often officers are at schools. That includes making campuses regular stops on officers’ patrols and giving them rooms inside schools to stop and file reports while on duty