the shooter who you see on the screen appears to have been unable to find anyone to shoot. we can also see how quick and brave the response from both staff members and the first responders was. this woman was outside the school, out in the open when police arrived. not only was she putting herself in danger by not getting into a more secure location. but listen how she communicated to the police when they arrived. that woman quickly and concisely told the police everything they needed to know, be careful, two kids might still be in the hallways, people inside are telling her that the shooter is upstairs. seconds after that, the police had entered the building. the police then cleared the room, they cleared room after room methodically and with breathtaking speed. it s clear they have trained for this moment. and when they ultimately heard gunshots, they sprinted toward them. they neutralized the shooter. it s a testament to the teachers in a building for locking down so effec
weapons can do an ungodly amount of video in no time at all there s one other piece of video, it s important in how elected officials respond every time we go through a mass shooter. last year after a shooter killed 19 students and 2 teachers in uvalde, texas. republicans were blaming one thing, doors. unlocked doors. republicans made a huff about how the policy solution after uvalde was hardened locked doors. we talked about what we need to dobo to harden schools, including not having unlocked back doors. if the school was on lockdown, could the doors have been locked? ve classroom doors should be hardened tooo make them lockabl from the inside and closed to intruders from the outside. put a pin in that for a second. take a look at this. this is how the shooter entered the school yesterday. they used a semiautomatic weapon to shoot their way through the doors. i have no idearo if the door wa lockedth or not, clearly it didt matter. i m sure republican senators would
michaelangelo s statue of david. today we are learning that an elementary school in st. petersburg, florida, is barring students from watching a film about civil rights icon ruby bridges, a 6-year-old black girl who integrated new orleans schools in the 1960s. that, too, is after a single parent filed a complaint saying that the movie isn t appropriate for second-graders because it might teach them that, quote, white people hate black people, end quote. the school had sent parents a permission slip asking whether their children could watch the movie, which is a disney movie, by the way. about 60 kids watched the film. the two families would not give their children parent to watch. her claim was enough for the school to say they re banning the movie until further notice while they review the complaint. one single parent who admitted she only watched the first 50 minutes of the film. the common thread in all of these stories is that in
tallahassee, florida, was forced to resign after a single parent claimed that students had been exposed to pornography because they were shown a picture of michaelangelo s statue of david. today we are learning that an elementary school in st. petersburg, florida, is barring students from watching a film about civil rights icon ruby bridges, a 6-year-old black girl who integrated new orleans schools in the 1960s. that, too, is after a single parent filed a complaint saying that the movie isn t appropriate for second-graders because it might teach them that, quote, white people hate black people, end quote. the school had sent parents a permission slip asking whether their children could watch the movie, which is a disney movie, by the way. about 60 kids watched the film. the two families would not give their children parent to watch. her claim was enough for the school to say they re banning the movie until further notice