Current Weather in Indianapolis: Partly Cloudy and Humid With Approaching Thunderstorms Temp: 81 F (27 C)My Current Mood: ConcernedIt's happened again hasn't it?
Last week in Colorado a female student was shot and killed after being taken hostage by an adult gunman. Later in the week, a student in Wisconsin shot his high school principal. In Florida an adult wielding a gun was shot and killed by police after being spotted near school property. Here in Indianapolis, a teen was arrested after he tried to sell guns to some fellow classmates. One of the guns was loaded.
http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?s=5477131 Today a teen fled from police after a witness noticed him carrying a firearm near a high school in Las Vegas, Nevada. Just as the story was breaking on national news, 6 young girls were shot in the head, execution style, by an adult gunman in Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania. Three of the girls died from their injuries; the others remain in critical condition in area hospitals.
This all happened during the past week.
The atrocity occurring today in Nickel Mines took place at a rural one room schoolhouse in the heart of Amish country. All the victims were Amish; the gunman was not.
When I attended high school here in Indianapolis from 1976-1980, the scariest thing I ever had to deal with was the three bullies waiting for me outside in the school parking lot. In those days, the closest thing to a weapon at my school was a water balloon, a squirt gun or a drinking straw loaded with spit balls. The idea of someone bringing a gun to school, much less actually using it, was about as ridiculous as a dog playing the trumpet. The thought never crossed our minds. It simply didn't happen; at least not in Indianapolis.
The appalling atrocity today in Nickel Mines, PA hit close to home for me and many other Hoosiers. Indiana has the third highest Amish population in the country; only Ohio and Pennsylvania have more. I have interacted with Amish people many times, and I cannot think of a gentler, kinder or less threatening group of people. Why then would someone want to enter an Amish school and gun down innocent Amish children in cold blood? And if this sort of thing can happen in a remote Amish schoolhouse, it could happen anywhere.
I sometimes wonder what our youth must feel when they hear about things like this. I wonder what it would feel like to not know whether a fellow peer was secretly plotting to kill you and your friends as you sit in French class? I wonder what it must feel like to not know for sure if you can trust the delivery man walking through the doors to your school?
Something has gone terribly wrong in our country (and probably in other countries too). Something terrible is happening to our youth. Somehow their innocence has been robbed from them. Today we have kids killing kids, adults killing kids, kids killing adults, and I'm not sure what we can do to correct it, or if we even can. It may be too late.
Last month a sniper was arrested here in Indiana after he killed a motorist on I-65 near Seymour and attempted to kill several other people on I-69 in Muncie.
http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?s=5187433 The person who stands accused in these sniper attacks is a seventeen year old boy.
http://www.wishtv.com/Global/story.asp?s=5485202