In the wake of Newtown, Connecticut voters are strongly in support of metal detectors at the entrances of schools, and narrowly in favor of the more extreme measure of maintaining armed guards on school grounds. Are these measures appropriate given the exponentially higher number of children we lose to other, perhaps more easily avoidable tragedies?
In the wake of Newtown, Connecticut voters are strongly in support of metal detectors at the entrances of schools, and narrowly in favor of the more extreme measure of maintaining armed guards on school grounds. Are these measures appropriate given the exponentially higher number of children we lose to other, perhaps more easily avoidable tragedies?