Colt Gray was exercising his right to bear arms and to have a bare brain like millions of morons who live in the southern states of the union. It just so happens that, even after the FBI told his father that Colt was threatening to do a school shooting, he went out and bought him an AR-15 machine gun for Christmas. He must be a very devout NRA believer. He in fact named his future criminal son after a gun, "Colt".
Just look at Colt: an angelic looking white boy who wouldn't harm a fly. He and his inbred family of Georgians are Americans through and through. How could such a thing happen?
The American folksy tradition of shooting and killing other people continues. It is a tradition in which every day, randomly and without a planned schedule, two armed attacks kill a few people for no obvious cause. Most often these attacks occur in schools. With this violence so engrained in US traditions and culture, no wonder the Americans support their friends the Israelis in their wholesale genocide of the Palestinian people.
They call them "Shootings" because the word "attack" might suggest hatred or enmity, while the word "Shootings" is a soft endearing term for this ancient American tradition that the American people are so proud of that they continue to reject any attempt at regulating the possession of weapons, even by jackass loonies from the neanderthal boonies of Appalachian culture.
The tradition is multi-faceted. It begins with an often young teenager, haunted by a Hollywood movie showing a superhero mowing down people like paper dolls, steals his NRA-affiliated father's gun or AR-15, the pride of American weaponry, sends a few messages on social media telling how he's gonna be a superhero himself, shows up at his school the next morning bedecked with ammo and magazines, and imitates the superhero he saw in the movie. The same adrenaline rush he got from watching the movie, runs a hundred-fold more powerful in his veins as he mows down his classmates and his teachers.
The next stage in the venerable tradition is for someone to call the Police who more often than not are afraid (Uvalde) of entering the premises to confront the superhero, but ultimately they shoot or capture the now famous teenager (in this case a moron from the backward state of Georgia). Meanwhile, his fellow classmates who have been repeatedly well-trained in drills on how to duck under desks or lie flat on their bellies (unlike their training in reading, writing or arithmetic which sucks), start sending text messages to their parents. In turn, the parents rush to the school and join in the celebration of this unique American tradition.
Naturally, the media hear of the "shootings" and also rush to the scene and there lies the ultimate paroxysm of the festival, namely the interviews by the media of parents, classmates and teaching staff. You'll see tears running down the cheeks in answer to dumb questions like "How did you feel being the target of the superhero?" or, "who and what were you thinking of as the bullets were flying overhead?" You'll get full hours of coverage on every television channel and station around the country, and unknown average Americans suddenly get their 15 minutes of fame.
Then, to the pleasure of all Americans, several local and federal officials yearning for an award or medal (the mayor, State psychologists, Police, FBI, State troopers, ATF, ....) also get their 15 minutes of fame by standing as a group before the cameras and pat one another on the back for having done such a fantastic job: This was a very successful celebration of the American tradition: Only 4 people were killed, when many more could have been killed and by comparison to other similar bloody festivals where 15 or 20 or 30 children are killed. Those Georgians are the best.
The next day, the celebrants converge on the bloody scene and lay flowers, hold prayers, cry and console one another. Just imagine sacrificing your children and their teachers to uphold this most venerable of American traditions; it's far more honorable, would say Donald Dumb, than sending them to be killed in some war overseas. At least here, they die on US soil, while the others are losers and suckers for having gotten killed or captured overseas.
The final chapter of the bloody festival is when the parents of the students who were killed by the superhero start a foundation or an organization determined to fight the rampant availability of weapons. Now mind you, these same people who now want to fight the white christian militia known as the NRA and those in Congress who back it used to be themselves ardent supporters of the NRA and the second amendment. It is only when their own children are killed that they suddenly turn against the NRA.
Academics and historians are called upon to comment and compare and contrast the shooting with previous shootings. Elaborate theories are debated. Books are written. This latest shooting in the backward state of Georgia is the first this school year. Many more are very likely to take place, and the American people continue to be proud of their "freedom" to bear arms regardless of the cost in human life, and to send their children get killed in school by some deranged moron who was exercising his constituional 2nd amendment right.
I suggest the US government should emulate the Zionists:
- First, send the US army to demolish the home of the shooter
- Place his parents in a squalid refugee camp
- Bomb the entire neighborhood where the shooter's home is located
- If the shooter has acccomplices, jail them for years under torture
This brutal approach hasn't worked very well in backward Israel, but it might just work fine in the advanced Unites States of America.
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'I had so much fear': Students recount shooting at Georgia high school
MEREDITH DELISO
Wed, September 4, 2024
Joshua Maloch thought his Georgia high school was holding an active shooter drill when an alarm went off Wednesday morning alerting a school lockdown.
"We all had to get into the corner of my class and duck down," the 10th grader at Apalachee High School in Winder, told ABC News.
"I didn't think it was real, because a lot of times I have drills," he added.
PHOTO: Law enforcement works at the scene as students wait to be picked up by their parents after a shooting at Apalachee High School on Sept. 4, 2024 in Winder, Ga. (Megan Varner/Getty Images)
It was when he heard multiple shots ring out that he said feared for his life and was scared his brother and sister might not make it out.
"Everybody was scared, and people were screaming, calling their moms, everything," he said.
Two students and two teachers were killed and another nine victims were taken to hospitals with injuries in the shooting at Apalachee High School, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
The suspect -- a 14-year-old male student at the high school -- is in custody, authorities said.
Alexandra Romero, a sophomore at Apalachee High School, told ABC News that students in her classroom began hugging each other while covering during the shooting.
"I was scared. I had so much fear, like I'm still shaking, like I was so scared. I didn't know my like feelings were so heightened. I cried too," she said.
She said that after they were able to leave the classroom, she saw a teacher on the floor and "blood everywhere."
"I'm definitely scared to go back. I talked with my parents and stuff. I don't feel safe going back there for a while," she said. "It's hard to get out of my head, like seeing that body right there."
PHOTO: A medical helicopter is seen in front of Apalachee High School after a shooting at the school, Sept. 4, 2024, in Winder, Ga. (Mike Stewart/AP)
Senior Sergio Caldera, 17, said he was in chemistry class when he heard gunshots.
"My teacher goes and opens the door to see what's going on. Another teacher comes running in and tells her to close the door because there's an active shooter," Caldera told ABC News.
He said his teacher locked the door and the students ran to the back of the room. Caldera said they heard screams from outside as they "huddled up."
At some point, Caldera said someone pounded on his classroom door and shouted "Open up!" multiple times. When the knocking stopped, Caldera said he heard more gunshots and screams.
He said his class later evacuated to the football field.
Kyson Stancion said he was in class when he heard gunshots and "heard police scream, telling somebody, 'There's a shooting going on, get down, get back in the classroom.'"
"I was scared because I've never been in a school shooting," he told ABC News.
"Everybody was crying. My teacher tried to keep everybody safe," he added.
Sherley Martinez, a 12th grader at the school, said she was in a classroom when she heard gunshots ring out.
"Kids started crying, everyone was freaking out," she told ABC News.
She said she was scared but tried to comfort her classmates.
"I tried to keep everybody comfortable," she said. "I was telling everybody, 'It's going to be OK.'"
"In our small town, we'd never really would expect anything like this to happen," she added.
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