I mean you realize the potential fuel you are talking about are schoolchildren, right.
uh, possibly more importantly than than that people aren't actually fires and do not operate under the same mechanisms as a wildfire, never mind we currently by and large can't even manage the research to find out if methods other than "accelerant" are still viable thanks to the country's goddamn conservative politicians
... also the "fire", if you really want to call proliferation that, is an increasingly small minority of the population, so... I'unno. I guess murdering gun collectors and shop owners and whatnot and melting down their stock is a thing you
could do, but somehow I can't help but think it'd be of a degree of use somewhere in the same ballpark as arming teachers.
Regardless, I'm not about to judge anyone for choosing not to bring a handgun to an AR fight.
I wouldn't judge them either, unless it happened to be their exact job which they have trained for, and that furthermore there are children that are part of the AR fight. There have been plenty of people who tried to overcome the attackers (and sometimes succeeded) while completely unarmed. Even if he wasn't going to join the actual fighting, he could've at least helped people evacuate.
I mean... my question is if he actually
was trained for it. Iirc the guy was a school resource officer in his fifties, not someone in... whatever the hell unit handles situations like that. Swat or something, probably. If his training included prep for a mass shooting event involving shit like an AR-15 to begin with, the chances of said training being worth a shit are pretty small.
It's certainly not his job, though. Courts established there's no duty to protect individuals a long ways back, and if the suspect was arrested his "job" was more or less done.