Another View
Do you feel safe in America?
Truly safe?
Does the parochial setting of the Lehigh Valley provide you, your family and your friends with the necessary measures to ensure your safety and well-being
Last week, Liberty High School in Bethlehem was locked down due to a 911 call regarding three armed men who allegedly entered the school. The incident hit home for many living in Bethlehem and the Lehigh Valley.
Fortunately, Liberty wasted no time in springing into action.
Superintendent Joseph Roy took the helm and made the necessary, executive decisions, ensuring the incident would not mushroom into a more serious event. Shortly after receiving the 911 call, the Bethlehem Police Department was immediately dispatched to the school, fanning out throughout the school campus, searching all students for possible weapons.
Events like these – in our public schools – cause one to question their own personal safety and the safety of those they love.
It would seem, over the course of the past six to seven years, all forms of violence – particularly violence involving guns – has dramatically increased in the U.S.
One need only look at the media reports over the past few years as proof. Shootings on military bases such as Fort Hood, Tex., in 2009, a navy yard in Washington, D.C., in 2013, Norfolk, Va., in 2014, and most recently again on Fort Hood are cause for concern,
Additionally, gun violence has occurred in our public school systems across the nation in places like Newtown, Conn., Cincinnati, Ohio, Sparks, Nev. and Pittsburgh, Pa., to name just a few.
When will the violence end?
Are there systematic causes, compelling a person to want to commit violent acts against others and society?
According to the Drexel University's Center for the Prevention of School-Aged Violence, children are not born into violence, but rather develop violent tendencies due to their home environment, feelings of depression, stress and anxiety, easy access to weapons, media accounts, movies and shows glorifying violence, the influence of peers, learning difficulties and health problems, lack of guidance and attention seeking.
It's paramount, in order to quell the need and desire for violence, we as parents and adults reach the youth of our communities as soon as possible and steer them away from the ideal that aggression, force and violence solves life's problems and difficulties.
It's also important our public policymakers, elected officials and community leaders come together to try to develop good, solid and fair legislation to ensure guns do not negligently and carelessly fall into the hands of young people.
Violent acts only beget more violence; more rage; and more hatred.
Violence, in many ways, acts like a cancer, eating away at the core of our families, school systems, work places and public places.
Violence also leads to frantic decisions by many to arm themselves and defend themselves against others who they perceive to be a threat.
Is this how we want to live? Spending each day, in a paranoid state, anticipating someone will harm us, our family or friends?
Let's begin in our homes, work places and schools to combat man's natural desire for violence with patience, understanding and love for one another and ourselves.
America, for its endless technological advances and exceptional educational system, should be at the forefront worldwide in advocating for and practicing tolerance and peace.
Rather than pick up a weapon to resolve differences in opinions, consider the option that love and understanding will solve personal differences.
Mark Reccek
editorial assistant
Whitehall-Coplay Press
Northampton Press
Catasauqua Press