Making Sense Of The Tragic School Shooting In Uvalde, Texas

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A makeshift memorial for the victims outside Robb Elementary School (Credit: VOA,/Public domain/Wikimedia Commons)

Americans are mourning the loss of innocent lives in yet another school shooting. On Tuesday, May 24, 2022, a gunman took the lives of nineteen children and two teachers, and wounded seventeen others, at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. The tragic incident is the second deadliest school shooting in US history, behind the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, when twenty first-graders and six staff members were killed. It marks the seventh-deadliest shooting in the country since the Columbine High School massacre in 1999.

"Texans across the state are grieving for the victims of this senseless crime and for the community of Uvalde," Governor Greg Abbott said in a statement. "Cecilia and I mourn this horrific loss, and we urge all Texans to come together to show our unwavering support to all who are suffering."

#STAYSTRONG

The chain of events leading up to the massacre began at about 11:28 am, when 18-year-old Salvador Rolando Ramos crashed his truck into a ditch near Robb Elementary School. Witnesses initially assumed it was an accident and rushed to help. But that changed when the teenager, donned in tactical gear, stepped out of the vehicle and began firing shots with his assault rifle. Ramos then hopped over the fence and entered the school through an unlocked back door. Soon after, he barricaded himself inside fourth-grade classrooms 111 and 112, which are connected by a bathroom.

Despite receiving several calls from students in the classroom, it took the police over an hour to breach the door and kill the teenager. The authorities later said that the incident commander believed they needed more equipment and personnel to tackle Ramos. They also had a false sense of comfort that the kids were not at risk.

US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden pay their respects to the Robb Elementary School victims (Credit: President Biden/ Public domain/ Wikimedia Commons)

In the hours following the shooting, it was revealed that Ramos had legally bought the weapon and ammunition a few days after turning 18 on May 16. Nobody knows why Ramos — who had no criminal record or documented history of mental illness — did this terrible deed. However, those familiar with the teenager said he had been in a downward spiral over the past few years. The 18-year-old, who attended the city's high school, had been bullied for his speech and attire since a young age. He had no chance of graduating with his senior class and also suffered from a miserable home life.

The tragedy has touched almost everyone in Uvalde's close-knit community of about 15,000 residents. It has also once again drawn national attention to the ongoing debate around the need for stricter gun laws in the US. Hopefully, lawmakers will take the necessary measures to help prevent such incidents from happening again.

#NEVERAGAIN

Resources: NPR.com, Washingtonpost.com, VOAnews.com, NBCnews.com,

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180 Comments
  • dinogames
    dinogamesabout 3 years
    It is so sad that an older teen would do such a thing especially with no criminal record OR mental illness.
    • foxiceskater
      foxiceskaterabout 3 years
      thats why we had a school lockdown!! but i'm in California y'all and thats sooooooo far away!! May God (Allah) bless there souls!
      • whatsthenews
        whatsthenewsabout 3 years
        They probably had a lockdown in every state just in case he was part of a plan to enter multiple schools across the country.
        • ureadyyet
          ureadyyetabout 3 years
          I live in CT and we did not have a lockdown. Although I do live very far away from the shooting.
      • kenialicy
        kenialicyabout 3 years
        We right now just had a safety breach
        • mya_c
          mya_cabout 3 years
          I couldn't imagine if i was in that school while that was happening. I'd run out of one of the windows in the classroom.
          • gogle
            gogleabout 3 years
            God bless them all
            • 128719
              128719about 3 years
              This is so bad what happened in Texas, Those kids went to school and thinking it was gonna be a normal day and there parents (Or gardenias)Did not wanna say I'll see you later and turns out there is no last goodbye.I feel so bad of what happened imagine being in there shoes and how sad they would be.....
            • bella3090
              bella3090about 3 years
              He took lives of innocent people they said he did cause of a bully and he had family problems that doesn't mean you have to kill rest in peace to all those people who died and just because your mad doesn't mean you have to kill or hurt
              • bucyvacazadi
                bucyvacazadiabout 3 years
                why would someone do that
                • gogle
                  gogleabout 3 years
                  My school has got a lot of threats like times pictures and some one even pulled a gun out in the girls bathroom
                • ilovepie314
                  ilovepie314about 3 years
                  It just breaks my heart that the gunman would want to kill countless kids, that were so close to finishing school. Those 4th graders. It just makes me cry thinking about it. Those kids didn't do anything to deserve it, neither did those adults. Those kids probably thought they would see their parents again, and the parents probably thought they would see their kids again. Nope. I feel so bad that this happened. I can't imagine being one of those parents, rushing tothe school to see if my child was ok. And those parents of of the deceased children, oh I cant imagine what they are going through. So sad. I sympathize. I'm so sorry that this happened.