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¿Cuál es el costo de una bala?

marzo 21 2018 – Tamara Estes

What's the Cost Of One Bullet?
What's the Cost Of One Bullet?

Escrito por Stacey Khizder

Hace unas semanas, estudiantes de costa a costa salieron de sus aulas para hacer una declaración. En respuesta al trágico tiroteo en la escuela de Parkland que dejó 17 muertos, los activistas estudiantiles exigen una reforma del control de armas. Su simbólica y repentina ausencia de sus aulas ha llamado la atención de muchas personas.

El control de armas es un tema muy controvertido en Estados Unidos. Miles de estadounidenses han perdido la vida debido a la violencia armada en los últimos años . Debido a su falta de acción en respuesta a estas alarmantes estadísticas, el Partido Republicano no parece haber avanzado. Tenemos que ser honestos acerca de por qué.

Los políticos estadounidenses reciben millones de la Asociación Nacional del Rifle. Cuando el dinero y los grandes donantes se involucran con los políticos y las campañas, siempre hay un favor que devolver. En este caso, la NRA financia a la mayoría de los líderes republicanos con la expectativa de que no implementen ninguna política que obstaculice sus rentables ventas de armas. Es una pena que se valore más el dinero y la codicia que mantenerse fiel a la postura republicana "provida".

Camiseta 'Bullet Control' por $26.

Al pensar en las mejores medidas para implementar el control de armas, el comediante Chris Rock tiene una idea: "Si una bala cuesta 5.000 dólares, no habría más espectadores inocentes".

3 comentarios

  • Jennifer Wilson : September 05, 2023
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    I think this is an absolutely phenomenal movement. I am a public high school English in a poor very rural predominantly “white” school district in extreme Southern Illinois. This is my nineteenth year in the classroom. It is in the same county in which I was born, raised, attended school, and graduated from high school in 1992. I love my small community, but there are lots of troubled adults with low intelligence, and then the schools see that in their children. There is a high rate of children living with grandparents or another relative, not a biological parent. Our high school students fight many demons, like drugs, poverty, racism taught at home, abuse from an early age, depression, anxiety, cutting, suicidal behavior, and relationship barriers. The lack of mental health education and support is appalling, so I am constantly talking to my students about it and incorporating it in any way I can into literature I chose and teach and any writing activities. Our high school is just now in the first stages of discussion between our schools board president and the spokesman of our three member board of county Commissioners to possibly hire and train a school resource officer through our county’s sheriff’s department to have in place for the 2019-2020 school year. This is at a cost of only $23,000.00 per year. As a teacher at our high school, which has no metal detectors and has the back of the building open and unlocked all during the school day, I am very passionate about doing all I can to make sure this happens. My seventeen-year-old son is a junior at that school, so I am a terrified parent. The original 1950s wooden door frame and door of my classroom swell at the beginning of each school year until the weather changes about the end of October. This means that not only can I not lock my door, during that time, I can’t even get it to close all the way. All I have to protect my students- class sizes of around 20-23 – is a can of hornet spray and a baseball bat that are under my desk. I’m a tough teacher; I do not tolerate disrespect. What’s to keep a former or current student who has issue with me from just walking in the unlocked back door, walking down the hall, opening the door to my classroom, and opening fire on me? But much, much worse, on my classroom full of students? How am I to protect them when I am set up to fail and the odds are in the favor of the perpetrator? This haunts me every morning as I drive to school; I pray daily that our school does not fall subject to a school shooting. But I know that it is SO possible! All the conditions are there. Honestly, it’s amazing that it hasn’t happened yet, but I thank God each day as a parent and a teacher responsible for her students that it hasn’t. I continue to pray that it never will. I am purchasing this T-shirt and will proudly wear it to school as soon as I get it. When my students ask what it means (and they will), I will explain it to them. Thank you. 😍

  • Patricia Bell : August 06, 2019
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    The costs of bullets are our children’s lives Let’s not lose one more life to gun violence

  • Catherine : March 22, 2018
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    I am assisting our local students with a March For Our Lives event here in Corvallis Oregon. I wonder how many other TYT members are doing the same in their towns.
    Also, I hope you will play the students’ anthem “Shine” as sung by the MSD Drama Club at the CNN Town Hall during your live broadcast. Sorry, I am lousy with getting links.

    “Together we will shine a light!” Go TYT!

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