If you haven’t seen it recently, or ever, you should watch the YouTube video of Jeff Daniels’ answer to a college sophomore’s question: why is America the greatest country in the world? It’s here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2HKbygLjJs, from a great TV show called The Newsroom, well worth watching in its entirety.
I don’t know whether the data Daniels cites in the excerpt is accurate today but in general terms it likely is. That’s a hard pill for many Americans to swallow. Fear and loathing are rampant throughout the country, especially in the so-called “red states,” where Republicans promote the decline of the United States for political gain but have no solutions to offer except blaming others for what are distinctly American failures.
No better example exists than the data on guns in schools. Guns are seized in U.S. schools each day. The numbers are soaring. https://tinyurl.com/55hxzkm5
More than 1,150 guns were seized in K-12 schools last year
Nationwide, 1 in 47 school-aged children attended a school where at least one gun was found and reported on by the media in the 2022-2023 school year.
One high school student described his school as a “war zone” following the discovery of two guns at school in the first five days of his junior year. Both pistols were loaded.
That student’s experience was typical of “students of every age in every state throughout the school year, a bleak reflection of a society awash in firearms.”
Last school year, more than six guns were seized each day, on average. Nationally, 1.1 million students attended a school where at least one gun was found and reported by the media. Data collection limitations, including the fact that many school districts don’t bother to track the information, make it clear that those figures grossly understate the true magnitude of the danger.
A Washington Post survey of 51 of the country’s largest school systems showed that 58 percent of seizures in those districts last academic year were never publicly reported by news organizations. Those same districts said the number of guns recovered on campus rose sharply in recent years, mirroring the growing prevalence of firearms in many other public places.
In some cases, quick action by other students and school administrators almost certainly prevented mass murders of students and teachers. But reports indicate that some school districts are more concerned about avoiding scrutiny and causing alarm than they are interested in protecting students and school staff.
Police in Golden Valley, Minn., complained in March that middle school officials waited five days to notify them of two boys who appeared to be posing for social media pictures while holding a gun in the school bathroom; a spokesperson for the Robbinsdale Area Public Schools district said officials have worked since then to improve the school-police partnership.
That sounds like, “we take our peoples’ security very seriously. Their safety is our top priority.” Those are probably the most common, and meaningless, clichés in modern American language.
In 51 of the 100 largest school districts, representing 6.3 million students, 515 guns were found during the last school year. Only 42 percent of those seizures were reported publicly. In DeKalb County, Ga., (includes Atlanta) with a 2020 population of 764,382, only two of the 24 guns were reported.
The 47 districts for which The Post was able to obtain five full school years of data saw a 79 percent increase in guns found on campuses over that time frame [past five years]. In many communities, the number of guns found has more than doubled, a trend that mirrors a precipitous rise in school shootings.
While many instances of guns in schools are the result of gross parental negligence, or worse, that is far from the whole story.
The gun brought to Rome High on the fourth day of school was stolen in Alabama. According to media reports, a gun stolen in Las Vegas found its way into the hands of a 16-year-old at a Lawrence, Mass., high school; another 16-year-old brought a gun stolen in Georgia to his Manchester, Conn., high school; in Columbus, Ohio, a high-schooler showed up with a gun stolen in Martin County, Fla.; and in Nashville, a 17-year-old came to school with two loaded pistols in his backpack, one of them stolen out of Madison, Ala. An 18-year-old was arrested at a high school in Ames, Iowa., for possession of a 9mm semiautomatic pistol that was stolen from the center console of a pickup truck in Cape Girardeau, Mo., according to a police report. The teen said he bought the gun from a stranger at a gas station in Missouri, seeking protection, the report said.
While it is tempting to blame the problem in large part on teenage “craziness,” the data indicates that many younger students are involved:
… authorities found guns on at least 31 students age 10 or younger during the 2022-2023 academic year …. As is the case in most school shootings, the majority of those guns were brought to campus by children who could not legally purchase a firearm on their own.
Common Threads
Several common themes leap out from the Washington Post and other reports about kids bringing guns to schools:
- School administrators are often slow to act and slow to inform parents about incidents.
- Administrators are sometimes more interested in protecting the school’s “image” than in protecting students and staff.
- Administrators sometimes refuse to respond to legitimate questions about these incidents, despite their role as public officials with responsibility to protect students and staff.
- Parents whose carelessness/indifference and/or active support for gun culture are usually not held accountable for the conduct of their children.
- Kids who bring guns to schools are often sheltered from consequences because they are minors.
That last point raises a bigger question. American society generally is based on the view that minors are not fully accountable for their behavior. This policy is based on the science of brain development and a concern that “immature” behavior” attributed to individuals will haunt them later in life and that this is unfair.
Why, exactly, such accountability is unfair is unclear. Also unclear is why it is more appropriate to be concerned about the perpetrators than about their actual or potential victims, many of whom will be traumatized, possibly forever, by their encounter with a fellow student armed and prepared to kill.
There are other consequences too. Teacher shortages because teachers feel disrespected, unsupported, and endangered. Budget issues arising from lawsuits against school systems that failed to do the right, and difficult, thing when confronted with a gun situation. Distracted students wondering when the next threat will walk into their classroom when they should be paying attention to the lesson. And more.
I urge you to read the full Washington Post story that inspired these thoughts. https://tinyurl.com/55hxzkm5 Every American should be concerned that our submission to the prevailing gun culture has led us to a dark place where young school children must undergo training in case their school is the scene of a shooter. And to a place where school administrators are free to simply refuse to communicate about their failures and their self-interested conduct at the expense of students’ safety.
Teachers in dozens of communities raised similar concerns about school safety after gun incidents last school year. In Harper Woods, Mich., in June, the teachers union accused school officials of trying to cover up an incident in which a student with a gun escaped the school staff and evaded metal detectors; in April, the Massachusetts Teachers Association accused a superintendent of “total disregard for the safety of students and school personnel” after a student posted videos of himself on social media that showed him wielding a gun on campus. The Southbridge, Mass., school system disputed the union’s account and said it was working with police on lockdown drills and other safety procedures.
The WAPO story recounts how students evade security systems and why students are often wary of reporting what they see. Once it becomes clear that the school is more interested in its reputation than in preventing gun violence, most kids are not going to risk being called a “rat” when they report someone who is handled with kid gloves and often back in the school soon after.
The graph below tells the story as well as anything. It does not, of course, measure the trauma experienced by students and staff who managed, by luck or whatever, not to be killed or wounded. This is the price we pay for the American obsession with guns.
One of the comments submitted to the WAPO story argued that the data prove that the “fraction of criminal violators in school populations” is so low, we should stop “propagandizing” about the problem. One response posted said: “Gosh, when you put it that way the blood stains almost fade away…” But, of course, they don’t. Ever.


I do not own guns but have owned shotguns in the distant past — for hunting. My older brother had guns. Raised in the south, I was acquainted with guns at an early age. Today, estimates run as high as 81 million Americans owning guns. Even if your estimates of who might harm an innocent person with a gun is correct, and I seriously doubt it is, that’s about 800,000 people who might. The headlines are replete with stories of “good people” using guns to kill innocent people in (1) fits of rage, (2) mistaken identity, (3) avoidable accident, (4) allowing others access to the guns leading to shootings.
Your suggestion that we need to know the backgrounds of kids bringing guns to schools has the tone of “it’s those bad kids doing this,” but many of the cases are clear: young, white, scared/angry/unstable kids threatening and/or actually shooting teachers/administrators and other kids. I am well aware of the behavioral economic explanations regarding how salient such horror stories are and how they may seem more common than they actually are statistically. But the data is clear — more guns equate to more gun violence and it’s not just the bad guys. It’s the “good guys” too.
The current “reality” is that the United States has more guns than people and many people own large arsenals. They are fearful, angry and dangerous. Many of them are delusional. They think the 2020 election was stolen. They were among the people who desecrated the Capitol, tried to kidnap the MI governor and on and on. They worship people like Kyle RIttenhouse, a true exemplar of the type.
We’re not going to agree about this. The “good guy with a gun” meme is a mirage. And even if there are many such “good guys with guns,” they don’t offset the catastrophic harm that the others perpetrate or cause indirectly. I believe the evidence of this is overwhelming.
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In what way has “prevailing gun culture” led to minors bringing guns to school?
How would you describe America’s “obsession with guns”?
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(1) In multiple ways. Kids are highly observant and influenced by adult behavior. Surrounded by adults who promote a fear-based narrative directed at the govt, the people next door, the “other,” watching the violence among adults on TV (violence in all forms, not just guns), guns become more readily acceptible as the “solution” to problems. There are more guns in America than people. Many “leaders,” political & religious promote the gun culture as quintessentially American & evidence of manliness. It is no surprise, then, that kids turn more and more to guns to settle scores, “protect” themselves, etc. School is a challenging place, where much power is displayed by bigger, tougher kids relative to others. Hurts are magnified in immature minds to severely threatening issues. Guns are an “easy” fix. That’s what I believe.
(2) America’s obsession with guns is evident in the number in circulation, the promotion of gun violence as the answer to many issues, the connection of gun power with manliness, with “defending the homeland,” with protecting the homeland from the “invaders,” all of that and more. Gun culture is everywhere on display, promoted by members of Congress, by the NRA, by religious leaders, throughout social media that is a huge influence on young people.
This is not just about the schools, which are only one manifestation. We see it in the new almost every day. A neighbor is upset because of his neighbor’s noise, his neighbor’s dogs, a car parked improperly, a stranger mistakenly pulling into his driveway, on and on and on. The solution: shoot them. Almost every day. The United States is the only mature economy in the world with this extent of a gun violence problem. More guns, more killings. Kids see parents with guns and conclude guns are good ways of solving problems. Why else would Mom have a Glock 19 in her nightstand? That what I believe.
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Celebration of gratuitous violence is not part of any gun culture I’ve been exposed to. I think we’d need to know more about the backgrounds of these kids bringing guns to school to know what influences are at play.
Despite the media attention given to a handful of recent incidents, illegal use of firearms by lawful possessors (i.e., not criminals) is exceedingly rare. >99% of gun owners will never harm an innocent person.
When faced with an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm, a firearm is the ideal solution. A growing number of people from all backgrounds and walks of life are availing themselves of that option.
In her _Citizen-Protectors_, sociologist Jennifer Carlson identifies gun ownership among working class men as a substitute for lost traditional avenues of ‘performing’ male roles. While she is a thorough & diligent researcher, imo her ideological lens skews her conclusions. In any case, “evidence of manliness” fails to explain the rapidly growing number of women gun owners.
The fact that at least 4-in-10 households have a gun or often multiple guns in it, no more equates an ‘obsession’ than does having power tools or chainsaws. As sociologist David Yamane (who specializes in what he calls Gun Culture 2.0.) notes, “guns are normal and normal people have guns.”
Your conception of gun culture strikes me as based on clichés & outdated stereotypes which bear little resemblance to current reality. I wonder what your direct interaction with gun owners has been, or whether you are a gun owner yourself.
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