'Expensive gadgets' won't stop school shootings |
In an opinion piece, Nicole Golden, executive director of Texas Gun Sense, warns that the $4bn "school safety technology market", which is projected to grow to $6bn by next year, will do little to keep children safe. While school shootings are preventable, she says, "none of these expensive gadgets are designed to prevent them", at best promising "to respond once a shooting is already underway", while there is also "little evidence that they work", including "disturbing reports of false alarms". "Spending limited public resources on flashy, unproven technologies instead of proven solutions", she writes, "benefits only one group: private companies eager to profit from our fear."