Originally Posted by Farslayer
Uh, ok, so let's see, it is acceptable to have loaded weapons in a classroom. Interesting. So if Cho does not represent that figure you gave, why would we need guns? Oh, and the law being broken was that funny federal law about firearms on state property. Maybe we should have armed congressmen and lawyers too. Perhaps we should let defendants and plaintiffs walk into court with weapons. I'd be curious to see if any professors support your view, I know those here don't.
as far as I know, there is no federal law concerning carrying weapons on state property. if that even exists, can you show that to me somewhere? in fact, Utah's law wouldn't be lawful if what you're saying is true. when you said the girl was arrested, was she arrested by federal officials or local officials? if it was local officials, then she obviously didn't violate a federal law.
there IS a federal law that says someone under indictment can't carry a gun, so that does away with defendants carrying guns to court. if you're talking about STATE court, that should be up to the state government, not the federal government. I believe that in most states, only court officials can carry guns into court. lawyers and judges can and often do carry guns into court here, and as far as I know, there hasn't been a courtroom shooting here.
the whole thing really doesn't have anything to do with Cho. because if a person is legally possessing a gun inside a school, there's really not much reason why you'd ever even know they had a gun with them. if the brandish the gun without any justifiable cause, there are laws in place to punish them.
so again, what's the problem? if someone wants to ILLEGALLY take a gun into school, they'll do so. so why can someone not LEGALLY take a gun into school.
I can see why a gun would not be allowed on an airplane, in a prison or jail, in court, possessed by minors, but I've yet to see any good reason why they'd not be allowed into a college.