School Shooters Past Came to Light, Raised Many Concerns

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Now that Salvador Ramos killed at least 19 students and two teachers, everyone is talking about how he was “a failing high school loner with an ‘aggressive streak‘, who was bullied for being poor and mocked for wearing eyeliner.” Maybe someone should have done something but they didn’t. Now that it’s over, everyone in America, especially the media, is focused on the AR15-style rifles.

School shooter ignored

The tragic school shooting incident could have been prevented. There were opportunities missed at every turn, almost up to the last minute. Nobody will blame the real cause for what happened, the overall breakdown of law and social order engineered by the liberal left. Instead, everyone will be concentrating on the gun violence aspect.

Funny how that matches up so well with the vote they’re taking at the U.N. The one that hands U.S. sovereignty to the World Health Organization.

It’s no secret that 18-year-old Salvador Ramos was a troubled teen.

While every human on the planet is awkward at that age, unsure of their identity, and convinced that they’re the only one going through it, Salvador waved some serious red flags around at school. Nobody blew the whistle to stop the play. Everyone saw the signs and waited for someone else to do something about it.

His friends and former classmates now describe him as an “evil” killer responsible for the “second deadliest school shooting in American history.” Uvalde, Texas isn’t happy to land the distinction. Ramos was shot dead in an exchange of gunfire with an alert border patrol officer. One student noted that Ramos considered himself “a target,” for his emo look and lisp.

He regularly endured “gay slurs” and was “mocked for his clothing.” His favorite game on Xbox was shoot-em up classic “Call of Duty.” What really cheesed him off was missing graduation.

A trail of clues

Ramos was clearly begging for someone to stop him. On heavily monitored and censored Instagram, Ramos “shared a photo of two AR15-style rifles just three days before the killing at Robb Elementary school.” On his TikTok page he posted “Kids be scared irl.” In teen-speak, irl means “in real life.” Nobody picked up on it.

He sent some disturbing messages to a friend also. “Pictures of his guns and ammunition.” When asked why, Ramos wrote back, “Don’t worry about it.” He didn’t.

A neighbor saw Ramos arguing with his grandmother, “claiming he was ‘angry that he did not graduate.’” Angry enough to shoot her. The woman screamed “He shot me, he shot me.” That’s when Ramos “zoomed down the street” and crashed his car.

Police would have been helpful at this point but obviously were no where in the vicinity. He took off on foot toward the school which nobody was alerted to lock down. Just before that, “the shooter reportedly showed off his guns to an LA-based woman via his Instagram page, taunting that he was ‘about to do‘ something.’” She didn’t tell anyone until afterward.

The rest of his class had graduated the day before. One classmate relates that Ramos had been gradually pushed out of the herd by taunts over his clothes and family financial situation. “He would, like, not go to school…and he just, like, slowly dropped out. He barely came to school.

Ramos’s social media was full of photos of his new guns, which he bought on his 18th birthday, state senator Roland Gutierrez said. Funny how none of the social media platforms said a word to the feds. Or did they? Once the new WHO rules go through, they can declare a gun violence emergency and the Constitution can’t do a single thing to stop the gun round up.

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