Over the next few weeks I will be posting excerpts from my
latest book, The America We All Want. I
am beginning with the Introduction, which is below.
INTRODUCTION
Nearly fourteen years have passed since the shooting at the
Appalachian School of Law. In that time period there have been approximately 31
school shootings in the U.S., resulting in the deaths of 126 people and the
wounding of another 98.
In the case of my family, the scars are still there. Danny
Dales, Angie’s father, died in January 2013. His health deteriorated sharply
after his daughter’s death and he never recovered. Her mother, Sue, has moved
to be near her son and his family. Our granddaughter has graduated from college
with honors and is headed to graduate school. Our son no longer blames himself
for not being in the student lounge to protect Angie. His recovery from Angie’s
murder was long and costly. It took a good six years of support and thousands
of dollars in medical bills to get him back on his feet.
In the intervening years, Virginia has not done nearly
enough to make our schools safer. The state had the worst school shooting in
this nation’s history: April 16, 2007, Virginia Tech 32 dead and at least 17 wounded.
The parallels between the state’s two shootings are staggering: ignored warning
signs, failed leadership on the part of school leaders on the day of the
shootings, massive cover-ups, and in the case of the Virginia Tech rampage,
out-and-lies on the part of the Virginia Supreme Court concerning who was in
charge of the investigation on April 16, 2007. In other words, gross
incompetence has been covered over, and the gun show loophole has not been
closed. It is now easier than ever before for people who are a danger to
themselves and others to buy a gun in Virginia.
In the case of the Virginia Tech shooting, the state spent
over $675,000 to have a company who does business with the state to write the
analysis of the shooting determining if the state’s largest university was
culpable: an obvious conflict of interest and waste of taxpayers’ money. In the
case of Columbine, the report was written at no cost by the panel that did the
investigation at no cost. In the case of Sandy Hook, the report analyzing that
tragedy was written by the state’s Attorney General’s office at no extra cost
to the taxpayers.
In Virginia, the state hired two public relations
organizations to spin the tragedy in order to do minimal damage to Virginia
Tech. The firms, Firestorm and Burson-Marsteller, were paid a total of
$813,000. Neither Colorado nor Connecticut needed to hire public relations
firms to manage the media because they had nothing to hide.
In Virginia, the lies persist. (To be continued)
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