#IfIDieInASchoolShooting is the trending hashtag that shouldn't be

I remember being in school and having legitimate concerns and worries; like if I forgot my lunch money in my other jacket, did I remember all of my assignments, and a myriad of other social concerns.

What I never had to worry about in school was dying in a school shooting. Yes, there had been mass shootings before. Columbine happened years before I even went to high school. Still, many of us wrote that and the previous shootings off as one offs, rare and unfortunate events that should have never happen but unlikely to be repeated.

One generation later and God, how things have changed. Last week, there were 3 school shootings. There have already been more than 20 this year alone.

The situation for the current body of high school, middle school, and grade school kids has become so dire, that there is now a hashtag on Facebook called #IfIDieInASchoolShooting.

This is the state of things. And this is the hope we adults have given to those younger than us. They are planning their own funerals.

Or telling us how to remember them after they are gone.


Or even what to do in response to the politicians who will most likely offer thoughts and prayers but do little else.



Or wonder if anyone will even care at all.

Even teachers and administrators are getting in on it.


This is disgraceful. This shouldn't be a trending hashtag. This should not even be a thing.

But this is the sad state of where we are. This is America.

But instead of the impending back lash from gun enthusiasts, the NRA, or any Fox (bully) commentator (Laura Ingram), or the utter silence from politicians, we as a people, as a nation, need to hear this. School was always meant to be a place of learning, but maybe the think we ought to be teaching our students, our children, is that their lives do indeed matter, and we can make school, and mass shootings a thing of the past.

These are the voices of our country's future. They will shape where we as a people will go in the coming years. Each one of these children and teachers deserves to be heard.


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