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In reply to the discussion: I spent two years in college in Kansas. [View all]Cleita
(75,480 posts)17. There's plenty of money once we get it away from the 1%.
Tornadoes are not rare events. Look up in the sky any time there is a big storm and you will see the funnels forming in the sky. I do not buy into your right wing collateral damage argument. If there is any chance at all an event can endanger our school children we must address it, whether it's guns or tornadoes.
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Oklahoma has regulations barring the construction of below-ground, steel-reinforced
TheDebbieDee
May 2013
#16
Not to change the subject, but does your username have anything to do with Naval Aviation?
11 Bravo
May 2013
#58
hat is the precise number of deaths needed to "consider spending a lot of money..."?
LanternWaste
May 2013
#54
This is Nothing Compared to The Subsidies and Money Hidden by American Corporations
otohara
May 2013
#66
I've seen steel reinforced concrete slabs over 6 feet thick busted up with big jack hammers.
Ganja Ninja
May 2013
#48
What then is the precise amount of deaths that would then allow consideration for the construction?
LanternWaste
May 2013
#55
You seem to be applying a subjective premise to an objective measure-- quite emotional also.
LanternWaste
May 2013
#56
There are thousands of schools in tornado alley which stretches across several states...
cynatnite
May 2013
#41
Hard has nothing to do with it. It's an unwillingness to invest in infrastructure
Cleita
May 2013
#64
no, but communities are unlikely to include tunnels under every public building
Liberal_in_LA
May 2013
#70