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I read recently about a high school in the Salt Lake Valley. It just had its 6th student suicide for the school year. This is an astounding number since you could literally combine the rest of the districts in the entire valley and not reach that number. So for one school to have so many suicides is incredible.
One of my friends attended one of the several community meetings they've had over the past few weeks to raise awareness about suicide. The first thing that Michael Staley, Utah's state medical examiner instructed parents to do was to, "secure your guns." He explained that it wasn't a gun rights issue but just a common sense measure that they're finding that parents woefully neglect. If students are contemplating suicide, having easy access to a gun will be an easy temptation.
Again, the issue is guns.
I think as a nation, we need to not only reinstate the assault weapons ban of 1994, and create a national gun registry (and subsequent universal background checks), but enact stricter laws concerning the securing of guns. Just this past week a West High School student brought his daddy's gun to school. Standard practice for this offense is a 10-day suspension plus a district hearing (which depending on the case, could result in a student's expulsion from school). Parents merely face a class B misdemeanor (fine of up to $1000 or six months in jail although jail time is rarely given). Parents who neglect to lock up their guns should be faced with stiffer penalties and prison time. I'd even favor higher taxes to pay for a police force to routinely inspect people's guns to make sure they're properly secured (they do this in Japan).
As a nation we have become far too lax with lethal weapons. And it shows. The US has 5x the population of the UK yet has 423x as many gun murders. I get that culture plays a factor into things. But gun laws (or the lack thereof) matter.
One of my friends attended one of the several community meetings they've had over the past few weeks to raise awareness about suicide. The first thing that Michael Staley, Utah's state medical examiner instructed parents to do was to, "secure your guns." He explained that it wasn't a gun rights issue but just a common sense measure that they're finding that parents woefully neglect. If students are contemplating suicide, having easy access to a gun will be an easy temptation.
Again, the issue is guns.
I think as a nation, we need to not only reinstate the assault weapons ban of 1994, and create a national gun registry (and subsequent universal background checks), but enact stricter laws concerning the securing of guns. Just this past week a West High School student brought his daddy's gun to school. Standard practice for this offense is a 10-day suspension plus a district hearing (which depending on the case, could result in a student's expulsion from school). Parents merely face a class B misdemeanor (fine of up to $1000 or six months in jail although jail time is rarely given). Parents who neglect to lock up their guns should be faced with stiffer penalties and prison time. I'd even favor higher taxes to pay for a police force to routinely inspect people's guns to make sure they're properly secured (they do this in Japan).
As a nation we have become far too lax with lethal weapons. And it shows. The US has 5x the population of the UK yet has 423x as many gun murders. I get that culture plays a factor into things. But gun laws (or the lack thereof) matter.
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