Maite Knorr-Evans โ AS
As the nation grapples with the deadliest mass shooting involving young children since the attack on Sandy Hook Elementary school in 2012, a few misleading claims circulating online should be addressed.
Claim #1- More students have died from gunshot wounds at school that police officers in the line of duty.
This claim isย true. Theย Officer Down Memorial Pageย has recordedย twenty deaths by gunshotย in the line of duty this year. As of 25 May, twenty-four children or teenagers have been killed by guns onย school sites across the United States, according toย Education Week.
Claim #2: The United States has experienced 288 school shootings this year
This claim isย false.
The claim comes from the websiteย World Population Review, which published a graphic that ranks countries by the number of school shootings that have occurred. The graphic, which reportsย 288 mass shootings at schools in 2022 in the US, is based on a 2018 articleย published by CNNย that looked at the number of school shootings that had occuredย between 2009 and 2018.
Everytown USA, a gun safety advocacy organization, has reportedย seventy-seven shootings on school campusesย between 1 January to 17 May. Typically law enforcement classify an event as a mass shooting if there are at least four casualties or injuries. This year, there have only been two other incidents, aside from that at Robb Elementary,ย where more than four people were shot.
The first took place inย Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in February. Five women were injured after โa fight broke out betweenย two teenager girls in the school parkingย lot after a basketball game [โฆ]. One of the girls called her uncle, whoย shot his gun at the ground,โ wounding a fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, and twenty-year-old women.
The second took place inย Washington DC in April, with Everytown describing the event by saying that a โ23-year-old male lone wolf fired more than 200 bullets from his apartment window, aimed at the school.โ No one was killed byย four people wounded, including aย โ12-year-old student, two women in vehicles, and a school security guard.โ
While neither of these incidents involved a fatality, there have beenย fifteen casesย where guns were fired on school grounds that did end with at least one death.
Claim #3: A good guy with a gun can stop a bad guy with a gun
The fact that more children have died by gunfire at schools than police have in the line of duty is quite jarring for most people. Many, including responsible gun owners,ย see this as too high a price to pay for the right to bear arms.
Additionally, as many Republicans call for a moreย significant presence of law enforcement and gunsย on school grounds, it begs the question of whether this is an effective way to protect bothย children and law enforcement officers.
Earlier this month, when a white nationalist killed ten patrons at a grocery store in Buffalo the store security guard, a retired police officer,ย Aaron Salter, was one of the people killed. Salter was one of the first people to engage the shooter,ย firing multiple shots that did not affect the attacker because of his tactical gear.
Similarly, atย Robb Elementary School, two police officers were able to engage the shooter before he entered the campus. The two officers reportedly exchanged fire with the gunman but were were unable to stop him and waited for backup to enter the school, giving him time to murder twenty-one people,ย nineteen of which were children.
What both the case of the two responding officers in Texas andย Aaron Salter highlightย is the danger current gun laws pose for law enforcement officials.ย Not only do they leave children and the general public, vulnerable to violence, but theย law enforcement officers themselves.
Do teachers want to be armed?
Aside from police officers, some Republican lawmakers alsoย support the idea of arming teachers. The problem is many teachers do not want to be armed, and they are not interested in having a firearm in their classroom.
A 2019 study conducted byย California State Univerity at Northridgeย found that โthe overwhelming majorityย [95.3 percent] do not believe teachers should be carrying a gun in the classroom.โ Another concern for many was having to use the weapon, with underย 6.5 percent saying they would be comfortable using the weapon in a case a shooter entered the school.
When looking at those who were gun owners,ย only 11.5 percentย said that they โbelieved being armed while teaching should be part of a teacherโs responsibilities.โ
Lastly, the researcher reported that a majority,ย sixty-four percentย believed that the presence of firearms on campus could pose a greater threat to school saftey.