Crime Gunman at a Texas elementary school kills 19 students and two adults before being fatally shot, officials say - yeehaw

(CNN)A suspect is in custody after a shooting incident at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, left at least two dead and injured 14 people, including students, authorities said.

The Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District (UCISD) posted about an "active shooter" at Robb Elementary at 12:17 p.m. local time and said law enforcement was on site.

The suspect was taken into custody as of 1:06 p.m. local time, according to the Uvalde Police Department.
Two have died after the shooting at Robb Elementary School, a spokesperson from Uvalde Memorial Hospital told CNN.

The hospital received 13 children at their facility who were being treated for varying injuries, he said. Two children were transported to San Antonio and another is pending transfer, Tom Nordwick said.

Additionally, two patients were dead on arrival, he said. Nordwick was not sure of the ages of the two deceased. A man in his 40s was also being treated there, he said.

Nordwick did not have conditions on any of the victims.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

 
First question: [is it a good idea for 18 year olds to be able to buy assault rifles?]

Abbott: this is the first time this has happened in 60 years, and anyway this is a mental health issue.

Q3: [didn’t local law enforcement know this guy was a time bomb?]

A: no, we are astounded, there was no way to know

Etc
 
It was Beto O'Rourke, fake Mexican, deciding to try to revive his political career on the backs of dead children and teachers
Screenshot_20220525-130612_DuckDuckGo.jpg
 
Even still, I wouldn't blame your country's problems on mental illness alone, if that were the case, the whole world would experience frequent mass shootings but we can clearly see that's not exactly the case. There is something going on with the USA that's somehow linked to mass shootings. Maybe a mix of mental illness, education, and culture, I can't say for sure, I just don't know.

in 1962, author Ken Kesey wrote 'One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest' and people assumed that novel represented conditions in all federal mental health care institutions. he was one of the beatniks (a very long and shocking subject all on its own), a seriously deranged drug addict who took LSD every day and was tripping 100 percent of the time while working as a nurse's aide in the psychiatric wing of the Menlo Park VA hospital. he in particular caused a lot of damage.

on october 31, 1963, John F. Kennedy signed the CMHA (Community Mental Health Act). the outline was: patients would be released from mental institutions and would voluntarily report to community mental health centers on an outpatient basis. the CMHA effectively allowed schizophrenics and other very ill psychotics to have jobs or live in their own homes. the federal government provided grants to states for building these community mental health centers, but less than half were built, and none were fully funded.

in the years following that, a series of decisions by various presidents and governors led to the failed social experiment known as 'deinstitutionalization', and means that even violently ill psychotics are unable to be involuntarily institutionalized. on July 30, 1965, congress created Medicaid, but it does not cover institutions for mental illness. states were forced to move the mentally ill out of mental hospitals and into nursing homes or general hospitals - these environments were not funded to or capable of housing violently mentally ill persons, nor the staff trained in how to handle them. thus, patients were released due to the cost and dangers they posed.

in 1967, california governor Ronald Reagan signed the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (LPS) which made it almost impossible to commit people against their will. the idea was that it protected their rights. every state in the union passed similar laws. after 1967, it became impossible to commit the mentally ill against their will.

in 1981, president Reagan signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (OBRA, aka Gramm-Latta 2). OBRA withdrew all federal funding from mental institutions and provided states block grants to use for treating the mentally ill. all federal mental health hospitals were closed. the states used the grants for other things because laws prevented any enforced treatment of the mentally ill.

the final nail in the coffin was the great recession of 2008 which forced states to cut virtually all funding for mental health. in 2019, there were 43,000 psychiatric beds in the entire country of about 330 million.

"In 1973, Rosenhan published the paper “On Being Sane in Insane Places” in the prestigious journal Science, and it was a sensation. The study, in which eight healthy volunteers went undercover as “pseudopatients” in 12 psychiatric hospitals across the country, discovered harrowing conditions that led to national outrage. "His findings helped expedite the widespread closure of psychiatric institutions across the country, changing mental health care in the US forever."

there's no evidence that these mistreated volunteers ever existed. the writer located one person who was dropped from the experiment and whose views were not published. Harry Lando said that his experience was positive.

"“The hospital seemed to have a calming effect. Someone might come in agitated and then fairly quickly they would tend to calm down. It was a benign environment."

tl;dr: americans demanded that state and federal mental hospitals be closed based on the ravings of an LSD addict and a lying university professor.
 
Archiving this because of it being one of the most monumentally disgusting takes I've seen for a tragedy such as this.
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Kyle Rittenhouse still lives rent free in their heads and he didn't even hurt a nigger that night in the physical sense.

Holy shit, my local news reported that that really was Beto using dead children to partake in some political theater.

And was he yelling "first amendment" as they threw his ass out? lmfao
Here is the video,


 
Dude snapped after he realized skating while eating whataburger isn’t enough to get elected and you actually need like, Yknow, political acumen and clear policy objectives.
Good, I fucking hate that wannabe Hispanic retard known as Robert Francis O Rourke.

Literally fucked his way into a billionaire family and has failed upwards ever since.

Let's hope a coyote eats him soon
 
Q: you said you would cancel all upcoming political engagements. Does this include the upcoming NRA conference?

Abbott: [timeline explanation] but my heart is in Uvalde right now and I’m here to help the people.
 
in 1962, author Ken Kesey wrote 'One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest' and people assumed that novel represented conditions in all federal mental health care institutions. he was one of the beatniks (a very long and shocking subject all on its own), a seriously deranged drug addict who took LSD every day and was tripping 100 percent of the time while working as a nurse's aide in the psychiatric wing of the Menlo Park VA hospital. he in particular caused a lot of damage.

on october 31, 1963, John F. Kennedy signed the CMHA (Community Mental Health Act). the outline was: patients would be released from mental institutions and would voluntarily report to community mental health centers on an outpatient basis. the CMHA effectively allowed schizophrenics and other very ill psychotics to have jobs or live in their own homes. the federal government provided grants to states for building these community mental health centers, but less than half were built, and none were fully funded.

in the years following that, a series of decisions by various presidents and governors led to the failed social experiment known as 'deinstitutionalization', and means that even violently ill psychotics are unable to be involuntarily institutionalized. on July 30, 1965, congress created Medicaid, but it does not cover institutions for mental illness. states were forced to move the mentally ill out of mental hospitals and into nursing homes or general hospitals - these environments were not funded to or capable of housing violently mentally ill persons, nor the staff trained in how to handle them. thus, patients were released due to the cost and dangers they posed.

in 1967, california governor Ronald Reagan signed the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (LPS) which made it almost impossible to commit people against their will. the idea was that it protected their rights. every state in the union passed similar laws. after 1967, it became impossible to commit the mentally ill against their will.

in 1981, president Reagan signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (OBRA, aka Gramm-Latta 2). OBRA withdrew all federal funding from mental institutions and provided states block grants to use for treating the mentally ill. all federal mental health hospitals were closed. the states used the grants for other things because laws prevented any enforced treatment of the mentally ill.

the final nail in the coffin was the great recession of 2008 which forced states to cut virtually all funding for mental health. in 2019, there were 43,000 psychiatric beds in the entire country of about 330 million.

"In 1973, Rosenhan published the paper “On Being Sane in Insane Places” in the prestigious journal Science, and it was a sensation. The study, in which eight healthy volunteers went undercover as “pseudopatients” in 12 psychiatric hospitals across the country, discovered harrowing conditions that led to national outrage. "His findings helped expedite the widespread closure of psychiatric institutions across the country, changing mental health care in the US forever."

there's no evidence that these mistreated volunteers ever existed. the writer located one person who was dropped from the experiment and whose views were not published. Harry Lando said that his experience was positive.



tl;dr: americans demanded that state and federal mental hospitals be closed based on the ravings of an LSD addict and a lying university professor.
Ok ok but have you seen Ghost Adventures with Zack Bagans? You missed out the part where the real fucked up institutions made haunted house attractions for the travel channel
 
The right to bear arms is a practical right. Low magazine limits (or outlawing semi auto) are unconstitutional because they make the arms significantly less useful on a practical level. Arms fitting those restrictions are too impractical to satisfy the right to keep and bear arms.
There is no satisfaction requirement for the 2A you pulled that out of your ass. You could say that not allowing someone to own chemical bombs is a detriment to their right to defense. It is a worthless point. We've already restricted sales of Machine Guns and Artillery in this country.
 
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Update on the Texas press conference but some guy got up to yell at the Greg Abbott or whoever and started a screaming match about as far as I can tell 'gun issues' or something and caused a scene.
Because the dumb old men said nothing in regards to guns. You know, the actual murder weapon....
Instead they skirted around the issue with some bullshit about healing and stuff.
Also lol @ "We're not releasing his name yet" nigga we knew it within minutes of it happening.
 
In Latin America you have guards with guns wandering around grocery stores. We have real security at sporting events here. That seems to help. Oh and cut administration staff to pay for it or stupid tech like the useless smart boards a lot of schools purchased but never used. They pick easy targets. So if you harden them, the shootings will decrease in frequency.

Pair that with mocking the shooters, especially ones that fail, and we’d get it taken care of.
 
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