Sandy Hook Shooting: The Right Questions to Start an Overdue Conversation

Impact

The tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School, which has left nearly two dozen or more people dead, mostly children and teachers, struck a blow at the hearts and conscious of our country. Perhaps, now we are ready to have a conversation about how we get closer to a day when tragedies like this never occur.

As a former elementary teacher, everyday that my students walked into my classroom we entered into a silent agreement that Mr. Williams was not only going to teach them, but would also keep them safe from harm. Every teacher enters into that same agreement with his or her students everyday, but today a young shooter in Newton, Connecticut broke that agreement.

It is an agreement that never has to be broken again by a mass shooting, if we are willing to have the right conversations now and turn those conversations into meaningful action. There are at least two major policy issues, both controversial and difficult, that seem to be at the heart of these mass shootings: mental health and gun policy.

While I am not seeking at this time to offer solutions or specific policies, I am suggesting that as a country we should be asking ourselves important questions.

Mental Health: As it concerns to mental health, we might want to consider the following:

— How do we increase access to and the affordability of mental health in the U.S.?

— What mental health solutions could have been promulgated to prevent this tragedy?

Gun Policy: As it concerns gun policy, we might want to consider the following:

— Did the Sandy Hook tragedy occur because there are too many guns in this country or because the teachers did not have guns?

— Where does our Right to Bear Arms end and our responsibility to keep our children safe begin? Or do they both point in the same direction?

This list of questions is not exhaustive, but it should be the start to a very important conversation that is long overdue in our country. Join me in starting the dialogue.