Sad Days in Blacksburg
by
Christopher Westley
by Christopher Westley
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My mind keeps
going back to the students in those engineering classrooms and the
incredulousness mixed with fear that they must have felt. And anger,
based on the idea that some incredible and unknown creep was in
the process of cutting their lives short.
Hey buddy (I’d
think to myself), do you know how much I sacrificed to get into
this engineering program? And my parents? I was up all night studying
for a test! Please just go into the men’s room and shoot yourself
now. I have too many plans for my life for this to happen.
The police
are getting much criticism, and much is warranted. They do seem
to follow a predictable script when bad things happen. Secure the
perimeter. Don’t let anyone in or out, and when the victims finally
do get out, make them hold their hands over their heads as though
they are the threats. And while preparations are taking place outside,
the shooter’s rampage continues unabated. It isn’t until he kills
himself that the police seem to decide on an entry plan. Just like
Columbine. Is there a better argument for private, decentralized
security?
There are questions
that the police need to answer. They claim they had good reason
to believe that after the initial shootings that took two lives,
the gunman had left the campus and was leaving the state. I’d like
to know why they concluded that, and whether it was based on nothing
more than case studies. It sounds like a story that they evolved
after it was clear that their treating the first crime scene as
an isolated, one-time event proved deadly.
But still.
These are campus police for whom an average busy night involves
making sure drunk fraternity members keep their parties inside.
That’s the way it should be. Frankly, if my son was considering
a school that trained its police to respond to mass murderers, I’d
convince him to apply elsewhere. There is a point at which a lack
of preparation is a badge of honor for civilization, simply because
it reflects a lack of miscreants that need addressing. So the deer-in-the-headlights
response we saw at the press conferences on the day of the shootings
is (in some ways) to be preferred.
I have less
sympathy for Virginia Tech’s administration, which (after all) sets
much of the rules and policy under which the police and student
body must comply. Shortly after the shootings were made public,
a news story surfaced on the Internet about how the Virginia legislature
recently killed a bill that would have allowed university students
and employees to carry concealed weapons on campus.
The Roanoke
Times story included a quote from "Virginia Tech spokesman"
Larry Hinker saying that "I’m sure the university community
is appreciative of the General Assembly’s actions because this will
help parents, students, faculty, and visitors feel safe on our campus."
Why do I think that Mr. Hinker’s 15 minutes of fame is not going
to be terribly enjoyable?
It shouldn’t
be. Gun control policies violate our natural right to self-defense.
Would the killer have even ventured out of bed that morning had
he thought that one or two people in those classrooms would have
shot back? Nonetheless, ABCNews.com posted a story on Monday afternoon
asking whether stricter gun control laws should now be called for,
thus trying the frame the ensuing political debate and squelch criticism
of existing gun control laws at the same time. A reevaluation of
anti-depression drugs seems more appropriate. Or perhaps on federal
dollar-fueled college admissions policies that reward the quantity
of students, at the expense of quality.
Besides, some
perspective is in order. A recent Surgeon General study found school-related
homicides comprise less than one percent of all homicides involving
students, and that the number of school homicides has been falling.
Kids are safer on college campuses than they are at most other public
venues. This reflects that bourgeois values still persist and the
triumph of society’s institutions that promote them. The political
class (and the political media) should refrain from using this event
to bolster their agendas.
It
dishonors those hopeful students who woke up Monday morning but
whose lives ended before noon. It is to them, and their grieving
families, that my mind keeps returning. Rest in peace.
April
19, 2007
Chris
Westley
[send him mail] teaches
economics at Jacksonville State University, Alabama.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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