How to Break Public Schools
The Tennessee General Assembly has never cared whether its constituents support the laws it passes, and it doesn't care now. We are on our own.
...Everybody wants to know how the underage Antioch shooter got his hands on a deadly weapon, but tracing the provenance of a gun in Tennessee is "a fool's errand," according to WPLN's Paige Pfleger, whose joint investigative reporting with ProPublica has tracked the deadly ramifications of Tennessee's lax gun laws. "State laws have made it really, really easy to possess guns here without any permitting process," she said last week on "This Is Nashville." "Background checks are not required for private sales, including sales online or at gun shows. That's not to mention the ubiquity of guns — guns stolen from cars, and that's very common."
Down here, school shootings inspire weaker gun laws. In the wake of the Sandy Hook massacre in 2012, when other states were tightening gun laws, Tennessee invited gun manufacturers to come on down. After the Waffle House shooting, legislators proposed an open-carry law that was opposed by parents, physicians, pastors, police officers, public-health officials — just about everybody. It passed anyway...
Margaret Renkl
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/03/opinion/nashville-guns-public-schools.html?smid=em-share
The Tennessee General Assembly has never cared whether its constituents support the laws it passes, and it doesn't care now. We are on our own.
Down here, school shootings inspire weaker gun laws. In the wake of the Sandy Hook massacre in 2012, when other states were tightening gun laws, Tennessee invited gun manufacturers to come on down. After the Waffle House shooting, legislators proposed an open-carry law that was opposed by parents, physicians, pastors, police officers, public-health officials — just about everybody. It passed anyway...
Margaret Renkl
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/03/opinion/nashville-guns-public-schools.html?smid=em-share
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