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Home Front: Politix
Walter Williams: Past Versus Present American
2018-06-10
[DAILYWIRE] Having enjoyed my 82nd birthday, I am part of a group of about 50 million Americans who are 65 years of age or older. Those who are 90 or older were in school during the 1930s. My age cohort was in school during the 1940s. Baby boomers approaching their 70s were in school during the 1950s and early '60s.

Try this question to any one of those 50 million Americans who are 65 or older: Do you recall any discussions about the need to hire armed guards to protect students and teachers against school shootings? Do you remember school policemen patrolling the hallways? How many students were shot to death during the time you were in school? For me and those other Americans 65 or older, when we were in school, a conversation about hiring armed guards and having police patrol hallways would have been seen as lunacy. There was no reason.

What's the difference between yesteryear and today? The logic of the argument for those calling for stricter gun control laws, in the wake of recent school shootings, is that something has happened to guns. Guns have behaved more poorly and become evil. Guns themselves are the problem. The job for those of us who are 65 or older is to relay the fact that guns were more available and less controlled in years past, when there was far less mayhem. Something else is the problem.

Guns haven't changed. People have changed. Behavior that is accepted from today's young people was not accepted yesteryear. For those of us who are 65 or older, assaults on teachers were not routine as they are in some cities. For example, in Baltimore, an average of four teachers and staff members were assaulted each school day in 2010, and more than 300 school staff members filed workers' compensation claims in a year because of injuries received through assaults or altercations on the job. In Philadelphia, 690 teachers were assaulted in 2010, and in a five-year period, 4,000 were. In that city's schools, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer, "on an average day 25 students, teachers, or other staff members were beaten, robbed, sexually assaulted, or victims of other violent crimes. That doesn't even include thousands more who are extorted, threatened, or bullied in a school year."
... and there's more.
Posted by:Fred

#4  Boys who got out of line when I was in school got paddled on their behinds. Now they get medicated. I'd really like to see some statistics on how many of these school shooters were medicated.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2018-06-10 10:37  

#3  Forgot to add to my #2 - "Gee Officer Krupke, Krup you!"

Even old Lennie saw it coming.
Posted by: AlanC   2018-06-10 09:16  

#2   Do you remember school policemen patrolling the hallways?

Yeah, I do. Not in the 50's but the NYC schools had armed cops around at some point in the 60's.

That was a symptom of the school malaise that caused my folks to move us from Staten Island to NJ in '57 on the advice of friends that were teachers. The teachers had lost control of the students and were not allowed to try and regain it. Had to do with the "new" theories of education in vogue at the time.
Posted by: AlanC   2018-06-10 08:55  

#1  It was about the 70s that 'Big Father' replaced the need for females to be really selective about who provided them sperm and economic sustainability of any genetic offspring that should appear. Ah, the oppression of that old patriarchal culture had to be destroyed!
Posted by: Procopius2k   2018-06-10 07:20  

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