I am a parent. I choose to live where school shootings are a lower risk than being struck by lightning. Doesn't mean it can't happen, but you can't live life in a bunker. My main worry is my little one being run over by a soccer mom in an SUV running late for PTA.
But let's put some numbers on this.
Center for Disease Control figures released for 2008-2011 show a fairly steady rate of about 600 accidental firearms deaths annually. There's also another 250 firearms deaths of undetermined intent, which I guess means someone said it was an accident and no-one could prove otherwise. Anyway, lets use 600 accidental deaths. Here's the data http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr61/nvsr61_06.pdf
Assume all 4.3 million NRA members go armed every day, 1.1 million police/law enforcement, plus 13.7 million hunters who go out one day a week every week all year (who we'll treat as 2 million who go out every day). and toss several million more criminals, psychopaths and communist infiltrators to bring the numbers up to 10 million.
This works out to an accident rate of 1 death per 16,666 person/gun/years. Pretty safe, but not absolutely safe. However safety is relative, so let us continue the calculation.
There are 98,817 chools in the US, according to the National Center for Education Statistics (data http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr61/nvsr61_06.pdf). Let's call that 100,000, and say there's an average of twenty classrooms per school. for roughly 2,000,000 classrooms.
Now lets arm all those teachers. Crunch the numbers and there will be about 120 accidental firearms deaths in classrooms every year. At a student teacher ratio of 20:1, this is 114 children and 6 teachers.
Since the turn of the millenium 96 people have died in school shootings in the US, excluding suicides. (data http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_school_shootings_in_the_United_States#2010s)
So assuming the armed teachers could have stopped every single shooter before the first round was fired, saving those 96 would have cost 1440 lives, mostly children.
More guns do not create more safety. The training of the average armed citizen (or schoolteacher) is not up to the task. Leave out proper lethal stress training, even the most basic rule of never touching the trigger without a target in your sights is not adequately followed.
FWIW, mife wife was in our parked but running minivan when it was hit by lightning in October. I was standing 12-15 feet away from it. Heck of a noise (sounded like giant static, not like thunder) big white/blue ball of fire, heat on my face, etc... Kind of neat. No damage to us or the vehiclle, although some of the electro-gadgets are all jinky now.
I like the idea of putting numbers on it.
If we do that though, should we even spend any real time bothering with the "mass" shootings? I mean, statistically we'd have much more to gain by tackling one of the other segments of firearm death than with mass shootings, right? I think that would be the case whether we used sheer number of deaths or number of events.
Of course, if we did that we might be forced into looking even deeper into the problem, and getting out of the smoke screen distraction of mass shootings, "clip" size, weapon color and shape, etc...
We'd end up needing to look at the individuals who commit the crimes; who they are, and where they're from, etc., and that wouldn't be PC (regardless of who does it). I don't know if we could make any legitimate headway under forum rules?
There's a reason (or 20) that the media and politicians have decided not to go this route, but have instead directed us to the pointless smoke screen distraction of mass shootings, assault weapons, etc...
If we looked at numbers, would we even want to go with firearms from an accidental death viewpoint? I mean, why waste time with a statistical anomaly, when we might be able to really solve something and save a bunch of lives? 600 per year? Please... That doesn't even match up with my
state numbers per year for motor vehicles! MV's are almost sacred though, so probably aren't a good topic.
You've kind of shown that mass shootings are less of a threat than accidental firearm injuries, right? So why regulate in an effort to reduce crime, if what we're really worried about is an accident?
How about accidental falls? What are the numbers there?
Bah! Let's go back to being distracted with a pointless discussion on mass shootings, "clips", and ugly guns... Much more interesting.
See how easy it is to get distracted?
We jumped from nasty guns used in mass murders (well, or not), to (unrelated) gun accidents (I don't lump accidents with criminal acts for the most part), to lightning...
There's a reason those guys are in politics or on the daily media... It isn't always to help
you/us, or to keep you informed enough to make logical choices.