Wednesday, March 4, 2026

The War on Guns in Schools – Stop the Fear Indoctrination

My Shadow Tribe,

In my previous letter, I outlined 7 action steps to defend the Second Amendment (link to that letter). Today, I’m adding Action Step 8: a critical long-term strategy against one of the most insidious threats to our right to self-defense.

Schools across the country enforce zero-tolerance policies that reach far beyond keeping real weapons off campus. Children have faced suspension, expulsion, or even being tazed and arrested for absurd "offenses" such as:
  • Biting a Pop-Tart into a vague gun shape
  • Drawing a picture of a gun  
  • Bringing a tiny plastic army man to school
  • Using a finger and thumb as a pretend gun playing "cops and robbers" 
  • Carrying a toy bubble gun or plastic water pistol that doesn’t resemble a real firearm

School administrators know full well the difference between a half-eaten pastry and an actual gun. These extreme overreactions aren’t about immediate campus safety; they’re deliberate efforts to instill a deep, irrational fear of firearms in the next generation. Raise kids to equate even the idea of a gun with danger and punishment, and it becomes far easier to erode the Second Amendment when they grow into voters and leaders.
 
Action Step 8: Dismantle the Fear Factory 
 
A) Challenge absurd zero-tolerance enforcement in your children’s schools. When an administrator threatens punishment for a child biting a potato chip "like a gun" or playing with a harmless plastic toy soldier, stand up and call out the nonsense. Demand common sense: a tiny green army man’s molded rifle is not a weapon, and a finger-gun gesture during innocent play is not a threat.
 
B) Vote strategically for school board members who respect the Second Amendment, the full Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. School boards set policy tone: elect those who prioritize real safety over manufactured fear. This is non-negotiable for long-term victory.
 
C) Teach your children respect for guns, not fear. Educate them on safe, responsible firearm handling from an early age. 
  • Encourage schools to provide gun and hunting safety courses (these were common before 1980s, typically as a part of gym class). 
  • Take your children to the range, introduce them to hunting or shooting sports early, and enroll them in proven programs. 
  • Consider the NRA’s Eddie Eagle GunSafe® Program (designed for Pre-K through elementary kids, teaching what to do if they encounter a gun: Stop, Don’t Touch, Leave the Area, Tell an Adult). 
  • Check your local gun shops, ranges, or community groups for other age-appropriate gun safety courses in your area.

Shadow Tribe, the battle for our rights isn’t won in one election or one courtroom, it’s shaped in classrooms and at kitchen tables. If this letter resonates, share it with parents, friends, or anyone in your circle who values self-defense freedom. Strength lies in the Tribe. 

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Between Shadows and Light,
   Cade Sadowlight
  
If this resonated or inspired you to act, consider buying me a coffee to help keep exposing what they don’t want you to know: → https://buymeacoffee.com/cadeshadowlight 

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