Children often grow up to have big dreams, yet they all be crumbled by the tragic events of a school shooting in seconds. This all gets ruined by one thing in their environment such as gun violence and gun violence may lead to death. This violence can destroy a kid's mindset and mold them to be someone different from what they were raised to be. While gun laws over gun control have been changing, they are still causing multiple problems for individuals such as children, and causing mental health issues for them in the future. Tragically, a lot of children’s environments cause them to grow up with mental health issues, which may lead them to gun violence. When children have to live in poor neighborhoods, they are more likely to have mental health …show more content…
These important impacts could be any kind of crime. Most crimes that are done are mostly done by the mentally ill. The mentally ill are not very stable in their environment so they do things that they think could make it better but then end up homeless. For example “In many places, police, judges and elected officials increasingly are pointing out that a high proportion of people in jail are mentally ill, and that in many cases they shouldn't be there”(Micheal). The police and judges feel that the mentally ill should have a place where they should go when they have done a crime. Rather than having the mentally ill go to jail. This is the reason why people with mental health issues are more probable to cause gun …show more content…
is the country with the highest amount of gun violence and most of it is caused by the mentally ill. Gun violence prevention policies that focus solely on mental health diagnoses will not stop gun violence. Instead, these policies fuel prejudice and fear around people living with mental illness and could lead to people avoiding mental health services. Most of these services are for children that experience the death of a friend or a family member. New Pediatrics article reports. “Among all high-income countries, the US accounts for 91 percent of firearms deaths for children up to age 14, a new Pediatrics article reports” (Michael B). This is a very big topic and most kids end up getting this from their environment and it mentally messes up a kid. This is why most of the U.S. has people with mentally ill problems, it's because they have a bad past and it causes them to have a mental disorder which ends up causing more mentally ill
So roughly 33,880 people die each year from gun violence. 11,564 people are murdered, 21,037 people kill themselves, 544 people are killed unintentionally, 468 are killed by police intervention, 267 die but intent is not known. Out of the 33,880, 2,647 are kids. This means that 1,565 children and teens are murdered, 907 children and teens kill themselves, 116 children and teens are killed unintentionally, 27 are killed by police and 32 die but the intent was unknown, keep in mind that these deaths are only done with guns, no other objects, The numbers would be much higher if we included other weapons and/or
Gun Control and Mass Shootings in America Gun violence is an unquestionable issue in America, with the United States ranking as one of the worst with both homicides and suicides using guns. That being said, we outnumber Mexico in gun related deaths and among first-world countries we rank far above others in the number of gun deaths, such as England and Australia. Consequently, we live in one of the only first world countries that does not have extensive gun laws and restrictions to gun access. Aside from the countless homicides and suicides by firearm in this country, one particular issue within this predicament is mass shootings, with the most recent mass shooting occurring on February 14th, 2018 at a high school in Parkland, Florida where 17 people were killed. Although, it may seem like an easy fix to just implement gun control laws into our society to eliminate gun violence, but it is important to note that Americans own nearly half of all firearms globally, which is roughly 325 million guns;
Due to their hazardous nature, guns must always be kept in the hands of responsible users; therefore, people diagnosed with severe mental illnesses should not be allowed to possess or carry firearms. Our society has partially realized this notion, as indicated by the Gun Control Act passed by Congress in 1968, forbidding people who “had been involuntarily committed to a mental hospital” from purchasing guns (Webster 35). However, it must be stressed that the control implemented by this act is not enough, as mentally-disabled people are still misusing firearms and creating massacres across this
Suddenly this leads to the chance that the weapon could end up in the wrong hands with a student securing it or the assailant finding it and increasing his or her weapon power. Some think that innocent children would not touch a gun or know how to use it, but Ken Corbett (2013), an assistant professor of psychology at the New York University, proclaims, “Kids get their hands on guns, and they know how to use them” (para. 7). As a matter of fact, Corbett also includes a 2010 FBI homicide statistic in his article: “The most up-to-date FBI homicide data indicate that of the 1,448 children who died as a result of gun violence in 2010, 165 of those deaths were at the hands of other children” (para. 7). A little over eleven percent of those deaths were caused by other children, nonetheless, those 165 deaths could have been avoided if the guns were secured or not
Mental illness can affect his or her mental ability to function on a daily basis. Anxieties about insanity and gun violence are also inspired with unspoken anxieties about race, politics, and the unequal distribution of violence in US society. Mental Illness screening would actually prevent most of the shootings, because psychiatrist can prevent an individual is a danger to self or others. In an article, Gonzales
Mental health and gun violence are two of the most pressing issues facing our society today, and their intersection is a topic that demands our urgent attention. Mental health and gun violence are two complex issues that are often linked in public debate. While many factors contribute to gun violence, mental health is often cited as a key factor. However, the relationship between mental illness and gun violence is not straightforward, and there are many challenges to implementing effective policies in this area. After examining the statistics of mental health and gun violence, it is clear that stricter background checks should be performed for someone who wants to purchase a firearm.
1,056: the number of people fatally shot or wounded on K-12 campuses in America within the last five years. We all know of the major problem facing the United States today: the increase of school shootings. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. urged safety for people of color and all people in America for over a decade in the 1950’s, yet the issue of violence and lack of safety still prevails today in different ways than in the past. Shootings in schools continue to violate students’ safety, keeping us from the peace for which Dr. King preached. With lack of support from school systems, the increase of school shootings in the US shows the result of poor mental health in students, and more accessibility to mental health help and support in
The problem with gun violence in schools has existed for years, and something should be done to eliminate the problem that endangers students who attend schools every day. One recent incident with gun violence in schools occurred at Sandy Hook Elementary School where several young children were killed and many others injured (Elliott 529). Also, a bombing incident in 1927 killed thirty-seven children and was likely the start of school gun violence (Elliott 529). Children, who attend schools, sometimes do not feel safe because of the problem with gun
However, in the book, Gun Violence and Mental Illness, published by the American Psychiatric Association they found, “Overall, mass shootings by people with serious mental illness represent 1 percent of all gun homicides each year.” State governments have already imposed bills that restrict any mental health patient to purchase a gun. But with the 33 states that allow for private sellers to sell firearms with no background checks, potentially shows a prominent reason for guns falling into the wrong hands of people. With the continuing disagreement of both sides to the argument, the United States government has only worsened the situation by not putting their differences aside and failing to focus on protecting the future of our
Although many of these shootings occur every year, there many steps that can be placed in order to prevent them from occurring in the future. Creating gun laws that provide better background checks on the buyer and family can help lessen the chances of a mentally ill person from obtaining a gun. Spreading awareness of a person with a mental illness-or generally spreading information of the many different mental illness- can also help prevent mass murders such as Sandy Hook from occurring. Finally, researching ways to prevent mental illnesses from forming can help prevent these violent crimes. If the blame is on the illness, why not find ways to cease them from affecting more people?
“It doesn’t affect me” or “They’ll move past it” are two phrases that are used too often when talking about gun violence. It may be easy to assume that gun violence is not affecting America when you have never experienced it, but is that really true? Students and children are the future of America, and those same kids are going to school everyday with the fear that they will be the next victim of a school shooting. School shootings leave kids and families with lasting injuries, mental illnesses, and fear for life. So how does this affect them, and what can be done to prevent gun violence in schools in the future?
In blown-out buildings, children load bullets twice the size of their fingers. In neighborhoods by the sea, they run checkpoints and stop four-by-four trucks, though they can barely see over their hoods.” This is absolutely horrendous, no child should have a gun, let alone a gun that is almost the size of them. These children struggle to carry these guns and feel no pain when shooting other human beings. The children take so many drugs that they can no longer feel any emotion or sense.
There is an estimation that about half of the households in the United States owns at least one gun. As such many people can have access to guns, including children and other family members. Many school based attacks involve young people carrying guns owned by their parents and going on a rage through schools and other places. Similarly, the ease of acquiring guns has led to vulnerable deaths of people across the country. Moreover, this leads obsessed people to escape their frustrations on minorities by murdering and threatening them.
Ever since the inception of this country 240 years ago, guns have been an integral part of the American identity; a sense of lawlessness, individualism, personal autonomy and freedom. They were the tools that liberated us, and gave us independence over a tyrannical, unrepresentative empire. However, in more recent years, these tools have been used more and more frequently in mass shootings, some of which are occurring at schools, targeting teachers and children. Since the infamous shooting at Columbine High School 19 years ago, we have had several shootings at schools, and we tend to get “thoughts and prayers”, a gesture with good intentions, but little actual progress made. This problem can be contributed to the increasing power of guns, and a lack of mental health coverage, gun
This has an adverse impact on their mental, social, and physical health. Many may presume that once the child’s gun is confiscated, the problem is solved; however, this is far from reality; getting a gun away from a child is one objective, and the rehabilitation process is another. Amnesty International is running a campaign to raise awareness of this major underlying issue. The problem starts with society.