Should teachers be armed?

A Texas congressman sparks a heated debate by suggesting that Sandy Hook Elementary's principal might have saved lives if she had an assault rifle in her office

If Sandy Hook principal Dawn Hochsprung had access to a gun, might she have prevented a massacre?
(Image credit: AP Photo/Eliza Hallabeck)

Shaken by the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Americans across the country have made impassioned pleas for new policies to prevent such tragedies in the future. Some are demanding tighter gun control, including a ban on semiautomatic weapons like the ones the suspected shooter, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, reportedly used. Others say the answer is improving mental health care for people who have complex psychiatric and emotional issues, as Lanza reportedly did. Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) has another prescription. Gohmert says we should make sure at least some administrators or teachers at every school are armed. "I wish to God [Sandy Hook Principal Dawn Hochsprung] had an M-4 in her office locked up so when she heard gunfire she pulls it out and she didn't have to lunge heroically with nothing in her hands," Gohmert told Fox News, "but she takes him out, takes his head off before he can kill those precious kids." Is arming educators really the answer?

Actually, yes: The "most practical" way to deter school shootings, says John Hinderaker at Power Line, is to require that a few "teachers or administrators in each school be trained in the use of firearms and armed at all times." Killers who want to go out in a "blaze of notoriety" pick schools because they're full of helpless victims. Give teachers the means to stop them and the murderers will stay away — "no one tries to shoot up a biker bar."

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Harold Maass, The Week US

Harold Maass is a contributing editor at The Week. He has been writing for The Week since the 2001 debut of the U.S. print edition and served as editor of TheWeek.com when it launched in 2008. Harold started his career as a newspaper reporter in South Florida and Haiti. He has previously worked for a variety of news outlets, including The Miami Herald, ABC News and Fox News, and for several years wrote a daily roundup of financial news for The Week and Yahoo Finance.