Before that week I had never experienced such a high level of safety in high school. From students to faculty and staff, and high school police and SWAT team, everyone is clearly at the cutting edge. Fortunately nothing happened, but I remember that the week was very angry. I would like to know what happens if our students and teachers have been allowed to bring a gun to protect themselves during that unsettling time since the beginning of the hell of that week.
A hidden carrying method was in the Texas book for 20 years, but gun rights supporters believe that college campus students miss their constitutional rights to acquire weapons. Supporters on campus says that students can help themselves with violent shooting such as UT shooting in 1996 and Virginia Tech Massacre in 2007
This is a discussion about some university campuses throughout the country. Are students and teachers more safe if everyone is allowed to carry a gun, or if a small quarrel could be a disaster? Many people think that this problem is to maintain the right to have weapons anywhere and anywhere and the legislators of many places work hard to make them suitable for college campus I will. Violent cases similar to Virginia Tech's case are not common in university units, but American higher education institutions have recently become the home of many dangerous crimes. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's report in April 2010 from 2005 to 2008, there were 174 murders at the university campus, receiving 13,842 sexual offenses and 21,675 serious abuses.
Since the appearance of Donald Trump in recent years, especially the campus has discovered himself at the intersection of 'right wing' attacks. From the University of California, Berkeley to Washington University to McMaster University, attempts to suppress white supremacy, anti women or anti-LGBTQ remarks are inevitably criticized as "freedom of speech". Conversely, many campuses in the United States and Canada are giving in to the pressure to provide marginal numbers to support hatred ideology as a platform, at the expense of marginal students.