“We have to give people a fighting chance, we have to give them an opportunity to protect themselves,” said Pinellas County Sheriff and commission chairman Bob Gualtieri. Polk County Sheriff and commission member Grady Judd agreed, and further illumined why. “In the ideal world, we shouldn’t need anyone on campus with a gun, but that’s not the world we live in today,” he said. “One’s not enough. Two’s not enough. We need multiple people in order to protect the children.”
Unfortunately, dealing with the world we live in today is not American Left’s strong suit. Florida’s teachers union and PTA have voiced their opposition to such a measure, insisting teachers are hired to educate, not be law enforcement officers. Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL), whose district includes Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, echoed their assertions. “Teachers want to teach, not be armed for combat in their classrooms,” he stated. “Law enforcement cannot push their responsibilities to make our communities safer on to civilians that should be focused on educating their students.”
To be fair, Deutch’s argument has one legitimate aspect to it: The 407-page preliminary report addressed the massive failures by multiple law enforcement officers from Sheriff Scott Israel’s department to respond appropriately to the atrocity. It noted that Israel’s active-shooter policy, which states that officers “may” confront shooters as opposed to “shall” confront them, was a recipe for disaster.
“‘May’ gave them the out not to enter,” Judd explained. “They decided to be cowards instead of heroes.”
Scott Peterson, the lone armed deputy on duty at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School when the atrocity occurred, tried to exploit that policy. In attempting to get a lawsuit filed against him by the family of murder victim Meadow Pollack dismissed, he asked Broward Circuit Judge Patti Englander Henning to rule that he had “no legal duty” to protect teachers and students.
Thankfully, Henning wasn’t buying it. In ruling against Peterson, Henning asserted that a school security guard has the “obligation to act reasonably.” She also found that Peterson was not protected by “sovereign immunity,” which prevents litigation from being filed against public employees based on their official conduct.
Peterson’s attorney, Michael Piper, has promised to appeal the decision. If he is unsuccessful, perhaps Pollack’s family will be able to attach some portion of Peterson’s $8,700 per month pension. The one the 55-year-old deputy began collecting after being initially suspended but ultimately allowed to resign and retire on Feb. 22 — one week after the shooting.
Sheriff Israel, who asserted shortly after the tragedy that he had provided “amazing leadership” to his department, remains as defiant as ever. “I have done nothing that would warrant my resignation and have absolutely no intentions of resigning,” he said in response to the report. “I am committed to BSO [Broward County Sheriff’s Office] and the safety of Broward County. I will remain sheriff for so long as the voters of Broward County want to have me.”
Maybe, maybe not. Governor-elect Ron DeSantis, who will be sworn in Jan. 8, repeatedly called for Israel’s removal during his campaign. Now, he sounds more like a politician, insisting he wants to see the final report and “if there’s corrective action that needs to be taken, then we can take corrective action.” Chairman Gualtieri insisted nothing Israel did could be construed as “malfeasance or misfeasance.” “He had some personnel that failed,” Gualtieri said. “Any law enforcement organization is going to have people that fail. And just because individuals fail doesn’t mean that the leader of the organization is a failure.”
Really? The report notes there were seven deputies who heard shots fired and failed to act, and it characterizes their conduct as “unacceptable and contrary to accepted protocol under which the deputies should have immediately moved towards the gunshots to confront the shooter.” As for organizational leadership, the report states there was “abundant confusion over the location of the command post and the role of the staging area,” which “stemmed from an absence of command and control and an ineffective radio system.” Nonetheless, it recommends that the BSO conduct an internal investigation into the incident.
An internal investigation? Shortly after the shooting, Israel stated his department had been contacted 23 times regarding the alleged murderer and his family. Records showed at least 45 calls were made between 2008 to 2017. When confronted about Peterson’s failures? “I gave him a gun. I gave him a badge. I gave him the training. If he didn’t have the heart to go in, that’s not my responsibility,” Israel stated. Moreover, Israel turned his office into an apparent patronage program, hiring six community affairs employees with salaries totaling $388,729, “from the ranks of his political supporters, building a community outreach wing his critics say doubles as a re-election team,” the Sun-Sentinel reported … in 2016.
Commissioner Max Schachter, whose 14-year-old son, Alex, was killed at the school, cast the lone vote against the motion. He would rather see the state hire police officers for campuses and allow non-teaching staff to carry guns. Allowing teachers to be armed “creates a host of problems,” he insisted.
Problems worse than the mass killer having the ability to reload five times?
Efforts are already afoot to undermine the commission’s recommendations. Duval County’s decision to put armed “school safety assistants” in its elementary schools was met with a lawsuit filed by filed by seven unnamed families and the League of Women Voters of Florida. According to the suit, they prefer an approach “designating unarmed guardians whose job would include implementing key elements of the consensus approach to school safety recommended by experts in the field.”
Unarmed guardians? How many victims who might otherwise be saved must be sacrificed to satisfy inane, anti-gun sensibilities?
The commission’s final report will be presented to Gov. DeSantis and the state legislature by Jan. 1. And in a one-two punch sure to outrage those who blame guns for everything, President Donald Trump’s commission on school safety has recommended revoking the scumbag/liar-nObama administration’s loathsome federal guidelines that directed schools to punish minority students at lesser rates, irrespective of the frequency of their misbehavior. That policy precipitated Broward’s “diversionary” PROMISE program that intentionally kept minority students out of the criminal justice system by ignoring certain crimes. County administrators and school superintendents, who directed cops to stop arresting such students, lauded the resultant “reduction” in crime rates.
Without that policy in place, the murderous psychopath who evinced highly troublesome behavior leading to expulsion would have likely been prevented from buying a gun. The rest is history — and reprehensibly politicized tragedy. ~The Patriot Post
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TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
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Trump, scumbag/clown-Schumer begin
blame game for pending government shutdown
by S.A. Miller and Stephen Dinan
{washingtontimes.com} ~ President Trump and Senate Democrat leader Charles E. scumbag/clown-Schumer on Friday began the finger-pointing... about who will get the blame for a government shutdown at midnight. “Now it’s up to the Democrats as to whether or not we have a shutdown tonight,” Mr. Trump said at a meeting with Senate Republicans. On the Senate floor, Mr. scumbag/clown-Schumer said Mr. Trump would “own” the shutdown after calling for it at least 25 times. He recalled that Mr. Trump said he would be “proud” to shut down the government. Mr. Trump said they were working “very hard” to get the spending bill passed, but it will take Democrat support to pass the 60-vote threshold to advance legislation in the upper chamber. The House on Thursday night passed a spending bill that included the $5 billion that the president demanded, setting up the Senate showdown before a midnight deadline to keep funding dozens of agencies and departments...Will Senate Democrats shut the government
to prevent Trump from getting his wall?
{legalinsurrection.com} ~ The fight over the wall isn’t about the wall. It’s about open borders and whether Trump can withstand the conniving of Democrats AND Republicans in D.C. ... It’s also about Democrats hope to hand Trump a “read my lips” moment that will alienate his supporters and damage enthusiasm for 2020. Trump seemed ready to capitulate, but at the last minute pulled back after howls of criticism that agreeing to a ‘stopgap’ spending bill that did not include the $5 billion he wanted for border security would doom his presidency. Rush Limbaugh said, apparently characterizing how Democrats were reacting: “They just broke Trump! Trump’s finished. They’re dancing on the grave already. They’re celebrating.” Trump then pulled back, and said he would not sign the spending bill that passed the Senate...Optimal Solution Confirmed – Kirstjen Nielsen Announces
Asylum Seekers Will Be Retained in Mexico Pending Processing
by sundance
{theconservativetreehouse.com} ~ A few days ago many critics were concerned over an announced pledge of U.S. State Department funding $4.8 billion for security and economic development in Mexico... However, CTH noted the approach was likely not what it seemed. Those who followed the USMCA construct closely noted that U.S. President Trump through Jared Kushner and Mexican President Lopez-Obrador through Jesus Seade were doing something much bigger than a trade agreement; they were structuring an entirely new U.S-Mexico economic alliance. With increased investment in central America by the Chinese government; and with Venezuela in a state of vulnerability to becoming a proxy therein; and with Brazil taking a more nationalistic approach; a completely new partnership which focused heavily on domestic security and economics was taking shape between the U.S. and Mexico. Throughout 2017 and 2018 the U.S. media was oblivious to it. Then, two days ago, the U.S. State Department made public the principles of an economic alliance between the United States and Mexico. The outline should be familiar: Economic Security is National Security....
Feeling heat from the left, Dems reject judges deal
by JORDAIN CARNEY AND ALEXANDER BOLTON
{thehill.com} ~ Senate Democrats said Wednesday that they will reject any end-of-the-year deal on judicial nominations... signaling they’ll toe a tougher line on court appointments amid heavy pressure from the left. Senate leaders usually agree to a package of judicial and executive nominees before a major holiday recess. Judicial nominees, in particular, have been a top priority of Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who views them as the party’s best chance to shape the political leaning of the country’s courts for decades. But scumbag/clown-Schumer has faced increasing pressure to crack down on Trump’s picks, with progressives accusing Senate Democrats of not doing everything in their power to block or at least slow the nominees from being confirmed to lifetime appointments. After a GOP senator said McConnell and scumbag/clown-Schumer were discussing a nominations package, Brian Fallon, the executive director of Demand Justice and a former scumbag/clown-Schumer staffer, reacted by tweeting: “WTF.” A Senate Democratic aide said Wednesday that scumbag/clown-Schumer would not agree to approve the final slate of judicial nominees as the Senate prepares to wrap up its work for the year... https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/422085-democrats-to-block-end-of-year-judges-package.
Stay in Syria
{nationalreview.com} ~ The American military intervention in Syria represents one of the most successful and cost-effective military operations of the post-9/11 era... At a minimal cost in American lives — through maximum cooperation with courageous Kurdish and Arab allies — the ISIS caliphate has been reduced to rubble, Russian and Iranian ambitions in Syria have been checked, and the United States has gained valuable territorial leverage in the negotiation for a permanent peace settlement in the Syrian civil war. But there is work left to be done. ISIS is down but not out, our Syrian allies remain vulnerable, and Russia and Iran retain their own ambitions for regional domination. That’s why Trump’s advisers have repeatedly talked him out of making a serious error by abandoning Syria before the mission is complete. As recently as September he seemed to have reached a definitive decision. American forces would stay, and he’d begin a renewed “diplomatic push” for a sustainable peace. Well, Trump has reversed course, and he’s about to make that serious mistake. Here’s the New York Times: President Trump has ordered a rapid withdrawal of all 2,000 United States ground troops from Syria within 30 days, declaring the four-year American-led war against the Islamic State as largely won, officials said Wednesday. “We have defeated ISIS in Syria, my only reason for being there during the Trump Presidency,” the president said in a Twitter post on Wednesday morning. He offered no details on his plans for the military mission, nor a larger strategy, in Syria. Rukmini Callimachi — the reporter who has likely done more than any other journalist to educate the public about ISIS — had an effective, fact-based retort to Trump’s declaration of victory....
Fix Federal Retiree Health Benefits the Right Way
by Joseph Antos, James C. Capretta & Walton Francis
{realclearpolicy.com} ~ The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is likely to lose tens of billions of dollars over the next decade as the volume of first-class mail it handles declines... This month, a task force established by the Trump administration released a long-awaited report recommending changes to the USPS business model to improve the agency’s financial outlook. A major barrier to this goal is the large and growing cost of retiree health benefits, including unpaid funding of $43 billion that continues to grow. Sensible reforms can lower the USPS’s retiree health obligations but shouldn’t shift the burden to Medicare. There are two major reasons for the fiscal crisis facing health coverage for postal retirees. First, the USPS has failed to implement accounting and financing standards for funding retiree health programs that are required for private-sector employees — and that were imposed on the USPS by Congress. As a result, there is insufficient funding to pay for retiree benefits on a permanent basis. Second, federal retirees including those who retired from the USPS are eligible for coverage under both Medicare and the Federal Employees Health Benefit Program (FEHBP), which provides health coverage for active and retired federal workers. The addition of FEHBP coverage to Medicare means that most federal retirees face no cost-sharing payments for many medical services. That drives up both the use of services and the cost of both programs....
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Florida Commission Votes to Arm Teachersby Arnold Ahlert: The Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission last week voted 13-1 in favor of allowing teachers who are willing to undergo background checks and training to carry concealed weapons on school campuses. The measure aims to prevent a recurrence of the massacre that killed 17 people last Feb. 14. The move would be a step beyond the current guardian program that allows school systems to arm security guards, administrators, or librarians, and it would require approval by the state legislature.
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