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Tennessee Special Session Sees Removal of Emotional Covenant School Parents!

Tennessee Special Session Sees Removal of Emotional Covenant School Parents

Tennessee Special Session Sees Removal of Emotional Covenant School Parents

Hundreds of spectators were kicked out of a Tennessee subcommittee meeting about a new law that would allow for more guns on school campuses, including grieving parents of children who were massacred at The Covenant School in March or whose children were forced to hide as the shooter smashed their way through.

The tumultuous scenario was exacerbated by parents crying as troopers from the Tennessee Highway Patrol forced them out of the same conference where they’d been invited to testify.

Lowell Russell, the Republican state legislator in charge of the meeting, justified the mass ejection by alleging that spectators continued to clap, chant, and hold placards despite being told to cease.

Legislators passed new regulations for attending subcommittee meetings, prohibiting the public from holding signs in galleries and committees.

Some public members broke the regulations by holding up “Joaquin’s First School Shooting” book and a “Covenant Strong” scarf. Others continued to hold signs in support of gun control, much to Russell’s chagrin.

Three ladies with signs were the first to be escorted out of the meeting, with one yelling “this is not what democracy looks like” as a trooper marched her out with his hands on her back, holding a little sign that read “1 Kid > All The Guns.”

Allison Polidor of Nashville, the first to be evicted, claimed her removal an infringement on her first amendment rights, telling The Tennessean through tears that “we’ve come to a point where you can’t hold up a sign. That’s not okay. That’s not democracy.” The Tennessean stated that “the crying of multiple Covenant School parents could be heard” as the room was removed, along with cries from outraged protesters.

After the public’s expulsion, including those who had sat peacefully, state legislators passed House Bill 7064. The bill permits enhanced gun permit holders, cops, and military members—on-duty, off-duty, active duty, and retired—to own and carry a handgun in any public school building, bus, campus, or grounds.

The bill was introduced in reaction to the massacre at The Covenant School, which killed three staff members and three young pupils after Audrey Hale, a former student, went on a rampage equipped with an AR-style rifle, an AR-style pistol, and a handgun before being shot dead by police.

On Tuesday, 22, 2023, marked the second day of a special legislative session called by Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, to approve gun reform legislation making it more difficult for mentally ill people to purchase firearms.

Lee’s efforts to restrict gun access were soon foiled by Tennessee’s deeply Republican state legislature, which instead enacted HB 7064 despite the pleas of Sarah Shoop Neumann, the mother of a school shooting survivor, and others who testified through tears.

The presence of firearms in schools is something I cannot speak out against more strongly. Teachers in this state already face challenges regarding funding, staffing, and being overburdened.

She spoke on behalf of herself, the Covenant Families Action Fund, and several Covenant School instructors. She said that having guns on campus on the day of the shooting would have made it a much worse tragedy.

“I don’t think they get what this means,” Neumann said of the Republican lawmakers to WKRN. We’re here for six people who were killed in our school. We’re just trying to do something…It’s hard to be here. It’s overwhelming.”

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