The NRA talks big on school safety, spends very little
Before today's main item, I wanted to provide you with an update on a previous story. At the time, RAGA ignored Popular Information's request for comment. But in a recent filing with the IRS, RAGA disclosed that on February 9 — one day after Popular Information's report — it returned the illegal contribution. This is the power of accountability journalism. It can force malign actors to follow the law, even if they would prefer to ignore it. The 2022 NRA convention was held just three days after the school shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas that left 19 students and two teachers dead. In his address to attendees, NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre described the organization as a champion of school safety. "We need to protect our schools," LaPierre said. "Because our children... are our most treasured and precious resource and they deserve safety and protection. That's why the NRA launched our School Shield program, to help promote and fund the necessary security that every schoolchild needs and deserves." The School Shield program was launched by the NRA almost a decade ago, after 20 students and 6 adults were murdered in a mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Lawsuit alleges that School Shield was a fundraising frontThe problem with School Shield, beyond fundingThe paltry funding for School Shield is a reflection of the NRA's hollow commitment to the safety of K-12 students. But the policies underlying School Shield are also deeply flawed. Other recommendations of the School Shield program are dystopian. The NRA recommends that schools eliminate trees near buildings "to prevent roof and upper-level window access to school property." Any trees that remain should be trimmed "to permit cross-campus visibility." Schools should also avoid "dense vegetation close to buildings, as it may screen various forms of illicit activity." Instead, schools should plant "thorn-bearing and sharp-leaved plant species to create natural physical barriers to deter aggressors." The report also recommends "hardening" campuses by "installing ballistic protective glass," creating a single point of entry with "an entrapment area." School Shield still is central to the political debate about gunsWhile the NRA is spending very little money on the School Shield program, its recommendations are extremely influential politically. After any school shooting, Republican members of Congress repeat the recommendations of School Shield as an alternative to any proposal limiting access to guns. The proposal is completely unworkable since many schools "have thousands of children, teachers and staff who could take hours to funnel in and out of a single entrance every day." Other schools "have multiple buildings, with children and staff often moving among them." Nevertheless, the NRA's position continues to dominate among Republicans in Congress. Because any package addressing gun violence would need the support of at least 10 Senate Republicans, the chances of any meaningful reform are slim.
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