As I sit here, well propped here actually, as I recover from extensive oral surgery in a state full of republicans that does not like healthcare or expansion of medicaid or even
anything that remotely resembles life preservers ( except for show on walls around marinas) today legislators will try and put guns in the hands of teenagers on campus. See, they have no problem with creating factors to end life.
Yes ....Scott can fire the Commissioner of the FDLE and the legislators want to turn http://www.wtxl.com/... guns over to kids on campus.... WOW how out of touch are these people?
Do any of these nuts in power remember Drunken frat parties? Initiations? The wild days of youth? Florida wants to produce Billy the Kids... I get it now.
Do they even remember the recent shootings on Florida Campus noted above in article?
How soon before along with prom dresses and rental of tux, will Florida parents be checking out the latest holster for Smith and Wesson?
Face it with Stand your Ground and armed teens, we do have a stupid state.
Well. if I don't answer you right away, it is because I am nursing some brusing on the face, sipping soup and taking ibuprofen but Sem Dem I hope comes along with more of the story because now on top of everything else, I am terrified for my 19 year old in college.
No to medical marijuana but yes to firearms in higher learning areas. I can hear it now..
" But Officer, I thought she had a gun and she did say she hated me and wanted to break up. Oops ...my bad."
Shaking head even if it hurts.
What could possibly go wrong with this being a law?
While a bill designed to allow people with concealed-weapons licenses to carry guns on college campuses makes its way through the Legislature, the administration at Florida Gulf Coast University is watching closely.
House Bill 4005, filed by Rep. Greg Stuebe, a Republican from Sarasota, is scheduled to be discussed by the criminal justice subcommittee on Tuesday.
Steube's proposal will be the first bill taken up by the subcommittee as it prepares for the annual legislative session, which starts March 3. Senate Criminal Justice Chairman Greg Evers, R-Baker, has filed an identical proposal (SB 176) in the Senate. The Senate bill has been referred to the criminal justice, higher education, judiciary and rules subcommittees.