1. Two killed and four injured as 15-year-old student opens fire in Washington school.
A teacher has heroically prevented a massacre from occurring at Marysville-Pilchuck High School in Washington. First-year social studies teacher, Megan Silberberger, reportedly walked up to the armed student, 15-year-old Jaylen Fryberg, and grabbed his arm as he reloaded his gun after shooting five people in the school’s cafeteria.
According to the DailyMail, Fryberg was a popular student, crowned homecoming prince, he also loved to play football and was a known gun enthusiast. According to reports, he had been recently suspended from the school’s football team and also “rejected by a girl”. His final tweet, posted the night before the shooting, read “It won’t last … It’ll never last … “.
The shooting, which only lasted two minutes before Silberberger intervened, resulted in one student being killed and four injured before Fryberg shot himself dead. A candlelit vigil was held for the local community last night.
Top Comments
#1. Love the photo of teenage killer Jaylen Fryberg happily holding his birthday present. A gun (or rifle, whatever.) Isn't it great when moronic American parents give a teenager a weapon for their birthday and they post a lovely photo of it on Facebook?
Finally!!! Some sense in the whole Ebola thing! Isolating aid workers and other people who have had contact with Ebola for a mandatory period, in a place that is equipped to deal with the disease makes more sense than allowing these people to go home to their own towns which aren't equipped and staff aren't trained. Introduce this measure in Australia too!
Sounds like a good measure...but is it? Imagine having no symptoms, finding yourself in quarantine with quite a number of people, some of whom may very well develop the disease. Will the conditions be made safe enough to protect you? Or are all those people, including you, now inevitably exposed to great risk?
Well you've already been exposed to Ebola, which is why you're there. I imagine they continue to keep you in 'safe' conditions so you don't infect others....which is the whole nature of ebola. I'm sure they're not all sharing twin beds and spas while they wait out the incubation period.