UAB students, professors and facilities -- anyone could be carrying a weapon if concealed carry is allowed on campus. Illustration by Sarah FaulknerGunter Wisdom - Contributor
gwisdom@uab.edu
Disclaimer: The views expressed by any opinions piece published online or in print by the Kaleidoscope do not represent the views of the Kaleidoscope's staff or the Kaleidoscope as an organization.Just imagine this, no matter how unlikely it seems. You’re on the third floor of the library doing something innocuous or mundane — let’s say that you’re cramming for an exam or thumbing through the pages of your textbook when you hear a loud and distinct popping sound, something that sounds like firecrackers. Your desire to maintain a sense of normalcy grapples with your feeling that something just isn’t right. You try to rationalize that the noise must be some type of work that’s being done downstairs, probably a maintenance man repairing something. It’s only when you hear the screams of your fellow students that you realize that you’re involved in an active shooter situation.
Everyone has been exposed to the events that have recently occurred in the last two years: a group of terrorists massacred concert-goers in France, a husband and wife team gunned down their coworkers in an event deemed “workplace violence” and, more recently, a lone gunman opened fire on innocent people in an Orlando nightclub. The standard issue government protocol dictates that victims should run, hide and then, as a last resort, fight. I must admit to you that I sneer when I read “fight.” Fight? Fight with what? My fists? In a life or death situation I’m supposed to bulrush my attacker with nothing but my fists or some blunt object near me? Let’s be honest with ourselves: it’s irrational. It’s a suicide mission. Which, I guess brings me to my reason for writing this: I want to be on a level playing field with my attacker; I want to be able to carry my pistol while on campus.
For both lower and upperclassmen, UAB will be full of new sights to see in the near future. Photo by Ian KeelMark Linn - Copy Editor
copy@insideuab.com
Whether you’re a brand new student coming to UAB for the first time or simply starting a new year of classes, UAB has many upcoming changes in store for you. From outreach efforts by the UAB Alys Stephens Center to a tuition increase, changes are coming to every corner of campus.