Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
International

US Teachers Say #ArmMeWith Resources, Not Guns

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Feb, 2018 08:55 PM
    Teachers across the United States have come up with an innovative campaign to reject President Donald Trump's controversial proposal of arming teachers with concealed guns and weapons.
     
     
    The hashtag #ArmMeWith has been trending for the last few days, in the wake of last week's shooting at a Florida high school, which claimed 17 lives.
     
     
    "I AM A TEACHER. NOT A POLICE OFFICER, NOT A SOLIDER, NOT A BODY GUARD. I would risk my life to save my students but I would never keep a concealed gun in my classroom, nor use it EVER. #ArmMeWith TISSUE & PAPER TOWELS. that's all, Please & Thank you," a teacher wrote on Twitter.
     
     
    "Bringing more guns into our schools does nothing to protect our students and educators from gun violence. Our students need more books, art and music programs, nurses and school counselors; they do not need more guns in their classrooms. #ArmMeWith," a second teacher posted on the micro-blogging site.
     
     
    A third one wrote, "It's about weapons of war. No civilian needs access. #BanAssaultWeapons #NeverAgain #ArmMeWith"
     
     
    "I'm trained to teach, not to shoot. Instead of arming teachers with more gun, supply us with materials & resources we desperately need. From 1:1 devices to #2 pencils. From mental health care to healthy nutrition. #ArmMeWith #DeafEd," posted another teacher on Twitter.
     
     
    "#ArmMeWith fair pay, an abundance of resources, excellent insurance, mental health treatment for TEACHERS, compassion from administration, less testing, more free will to teach my students to be GOOD HUMANS," tweeted a fifth teacher.
     
     
    Scores of students from Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School joined other students from other high schools on Wednesday as protests against ending of gun violence gained momentum across the US.
     
     
    Students from California to Washington D.C. held marches in solidarity with the survivors from the Florida high school. The crowd marched at the state Capitol complex in Tallahassee, with banners and posters and chanting slogans such as "Never again!" and "Shame on you!"
     
     
    Trump said on Thursday that he pushed lawmakers to "look at the possibility of giving" guns to "adept teachers with military or special training experience."
     
     
    Scores of students from Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School joined other students from other high schools on Wednesday as protests against the ending of gun violence gained momentum across the US.
     
     
    Students from California to Washington D.C. held marches in solidarity with the survivors from the Florida high school. The crowd marched at the state Capitol complex in Tallahassee, with banners and posters and chanting slogans such as "Never again!" and "Shame on you!"
     
     
    Trump said on Thursday that he pushed lawmakers to "look at the possibility of giving" guns to "adept teachers with military or special training experience."
     
     
    Trump on Tuesday recommended a ban on 'bump stocks' gun devices. He also directed his Attorney General, Jeff Sessions to make the proposed changes in the country's gun control law.
     
     
    Last week, 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz, went on a rampage at the high school in Parkland, Florida and gunned down 17 students and injured 14 others. He allegedly used an AR-15 assault rifle that he had purchased legally.
     
     
    Cruz was a former student and was expelled from the high school for disciplinary reasons. He has been charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder.
     
     
    After the incident, many lawmakers, gun control advocates and student survivors of the Florida school shooting have urged the Trump administration to implement tougher gun measures.
     
     
    In most US states, the age limit for purchasing the AR-15 rifle is 18 years, while the age limit for handguns is 21 years.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Vedic Culture Growing Popular Among Indian Diaspora

    Vedic Culture Growing Popular Among Indian Diaspora
    Vedic culture is still relevant and gradually becoming more popular among Indian diaspora, especially in the youth, said researchers and scholars at a seminar held in the national capital.

    Vedic Culture Growing Popular Among Indian Diaspora

    Delhi Woman Allegedly Murders Her Sister For Taking Interest In Boyfriend

    Delhi Woman Allegedly Murders Her Sister For Taking Interest In Boyfriend
    A 21-year-old woman has been arrested for allegedly murdering her elder sister in northeast Delhi's Shastri Park area for showing interest in the former's boyfriend, police said on Monday.

    Delhi Woman Allegedly Murders Her Sister For Taking Interest In Boyfriend

    US Man Throws Hot Coffee Over Muslim Woman, Calls Her Terrorist

    US Man Throws Hot Coffee Over Muslim Woman, Calls Her Terrorist
    A homeless man at a Dunkin Donuts store in US threw hot coffee in the face of a Muslim woman, called her a terrorist and assaulted her on Monday, police said.

    US Man Throws Hot Coffee Over Muslim Woman, Calls Her Terrorist

    Canada Asks Taliban To Free Couple Held For 4 Years In Afghanistan

    Canada Asks Taliban To Free Couple Held For 4 Years In Afghanistan
    Canada called Monday for the unconditional release of a Canadian man and his American wife after a new video appeared to show them begging their governments to intervene on their behalf with their Afghan captors.

    Canada Asks Taliban To Free Couple Held For 4 Years In Afghanistan

    Islamic State Claims Responsibility For Jordan Attack That Killed Canadian

    Islamic State Claims Responsibility For Jordan Attack That Killed Canadian
    AMMAN, Jordan — The extremist Islamic State group claimed responsibility Tuesday for a series of shooting attacks on police and tourists in Jordan that killed 10 people, including a woman from Canada.

    Islamic State Claims Responsibility For Jordan Attack That Killed Canadian

    Raheel Sharif Helped Me Leave Pakistan, Says Pervez Musharraf

    Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has said Pakistan army's ex- chief General Raheel Sharif's intervention helped him in exiting Pakistan, indicating the powerful influence wielded by the military in the country's affairs.

    Raheel Sharif Helped Me Leave Pakistan, Says Pervez Musharraf