State Lawmakers Want Day After Sandy Hook Anniversary To Be Gun Awareness Day In Schools

State Lawmakers Want Gun Awareness Day In Schools The Day After Sandy Hook Anniversary
South Carolina Rep. Alan Clemmons, R-Myrtle Beach, speaks at a ceremony welcoming Connecticut gun maker PTR Industries to the state on Monday, June 24, 2013, in Aynor, S.C. PTR Industries decided to move after Connecticut passed stricter gun laws after the school shooting in Newtown, Conn. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)
South Carolina Rep. Alan Clemmons, R-Myrtle Beach, speaks at a ceremony welcoming Connecticut gun maker PTR Industries to the state on Monday, June 24, 2013, in Aynor, S.C. PTR Industries decided to move after Connecticut passed stricter gun laws after the school shooting in Newtown, Conn. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

One South Carolina lawmaker believes there is an anti-Second Amendment movement taking place within the state, and that as a result, kids need to receive more education about their right to bear arms.

State representative Alan Clemmons (R) filed a bill in December with co-sponsors Richard Yow (R) and Garry Smith (R) that would create a “Second Amendment Awareness Day” on Dec. 15, the day after the anniversary of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. For this day, schools would be asked to conduct essay and poster contests relating to the theme "The Right To Bear Arms; One American Right Protecting All Others."

Additionally, the bill stipulates that students across the state should learn about the Second Amendment for three weeks, for one class period per day. Schools would teach these lessons using a curriculum developed or recommended by the National Rifle Association.

Finally, the bill notes that teachers should not punish "political, written, or artistic expression that includes references to guns or a militia" because of the First Amendment.

"Zero-tolerance policies are out of control. What started as school board attempts to stop students from bringing guns into school has turned into an anti-Second-Amendment movement, with significant social consequences," Clemmons wrote in his op-ed.

He continued, "I was shocked in August when a Summerville student made national news after he was suspended and arrested for writing a fictional essay about buying a gun to shoot his neighbor’s pet dinosaur."

The state legislature will reconvene in early January.

Another bill, this one filed recently in the state by Sen. Lee Bright (R), would make it so schools in the state could offer elective classes on how to operate firearms.

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