Episode Transcript
Downtown Salt Lake City at the beautiful Marriotte City Creek.
It will be going on until about noon tomorrow.
So it started yesterday, and so we've got some fantastic guests lined up and joining me for the whole show.
Rayl Cunningham, Regional director of Women for Gun Rights and uh say hi to the Gun Radio Utah audience.
Speaker 2Oh Hunradio Utah audience.
Speaker 1Okay, I'm gonna I'm gonna boost you up just a little bit because Denny's telling me that you have a soft voice.
So, anyway, Bill Patterson is on an unexcused absence.
I think he's on a ship somewhere, some kind of a ship, probably in the stowage section.
Speaker 2You shouldn't be allowed to take vacations, I know.
Speaker 3I know.
Speaker 1Anyway, so I get pictures from him by the Eiffel Tower or it was some kind of a tower in France anyway, and so, uh so he's on a it is an unexcused absence, and so we are here broadcasting live from that fantastic We've really had a great show.
In fact, Rayel, I'm interested to hear your thoughts on what they call amcon and which is part of the Gun Rights Policy Conference and Gun Rights Policy Conference is an annual thing.
This is the fortieth annual and they're having it and they move it all around the country.
And for a while there they were really picking states, especially cities that were really anti gun, just to kind of poke the bear, if you will.
And because they've been in San Francisco, they've been to Chicago, they've been you know, and you know, last last year they had it in San Diego, which wasn't you know, hideous, you know, it was nice, and then they've had it in Phoenix, which is nice.
But anyway, so let me tell you about some of the guests we're going to have on today.
Amanda Suffer cool did I say they're right?
Speaker 3Okay?
Good, she's not it.
Speaker 1She doesn't have a mic in front of her, so and you're really going to want to listen to this because she I won't tell you exactly, but she's associated with the National Rifle Association.
Speaker 3So anyway, pretty cool.
Speaker 1And then we're going to have another guest on and it's rail It's Ryan Petty, right, Ryan Petty.
He gave a very interesting talk I liked it a lot on where he talked about school safety.
He comes at this from a very interesting perspective and you'll want to listen to him.
And I think we're going to have him on third segment.
Is that?
Yeah, So Rayel is actually is doing what Bill would normally do and she scheduled everybody for me and so thank you very much, Rayel.
You've got You've got quite a group here at gRPC.
Speaker 2We're pretty lucky.
We have a lot of ladies from Women for Gun Rights that have showed up.
So many of our women are involved in lots of different organizations, not just Women for Gun Rights, and so it kind of brings us all together.
We have a really great group, even just in the Salt Lake area that came to support and show support for for everybody.
We have a couple of ladies speaking, uh.
So we wanted to come and make sure that we had our presence known and were able to show our support for this.
Speaker 3Definitely did saw your booth.
Speaker 1It's got the teal and you had a whole bunch of little Jesuses on your table with a teal tunic on.
Speaker 2Yes, because everybody needs a little Jesus in their.
Speaker 3Life, little Jesus.
It was great.
Speaker 1So, uh you you actually showed up you know, kind of before the regular g RPC conference yesterday they put on they started to put on this amcon talk about that, and you watched that whole thing you started early.
Speaker 2It was great.
It was put on by Amanasubacole and Charlie Cook and Cheryl Todd and their organization with the NRA.
No, it's just a bunch of a bunch of really wonderful people who are in the media, and they kind of just talked to us about what ways that we can talk about the Secondmendment, how do we get in front of media, what can we do better?
How can we stop using words like or so, which I do constantly unfortunately, And so it it was a really great learning experience, especially for me where I'm still kind of new to all of this.
I'm not a radio host, I'm not a podcaster, but i definitely want to have my voice heard.
Speaker 1Well, you keep saying you're new to this, but you show up at everything that there is, including the legislature.
You're out there, you're doing it, and we appreciate I know you're tak shooting.
Sports Council appreciates your involvement in this, and you're in groups involvement so makeup.
Speaker 2Time last time because I'm already kind of you know, I started a little late, so I'm making up time by going to everything.
Speaker 3You're doing great and you're a mom.
Uh and what is that?
Speaker 2Don't forget about your sponsor's clerk.
Speaker 3Oh okay, thank you, thank you very much.
That's good.
Okay, see you you really are just filling in for bill right there.
That's rights bill, wish channeling bills.
Throw a piece of paper at me with the sponsors thing on it.
Speaker 1All right, So yeah, we're gonna we're gonna have We're gonna have that and let's see.
Speaker 3Okay, So I did find out some things.
Speaker 1One of the interesting things I found out is that no state in the United States.
Speaker 3Restricts a dog from carrying a gun.
Speaker 2Oh I think I've seen a meme about that on Facebook.
Speaker 3Yeah, there is no state.
Speaker 1And New Hampshire has no minimum age for concealed carry permits in their statute.
Now, I don't know that they'd given an eight year old a permit, but technically speaking, if they did, they would not be violating New Hampshire.
Speaker 3Stay long.
Speaker 2New Hampshire has almost no like, they don't have any qualifications to get a permit.
You don't have to do a class or anything.
You just kind of go into your sheriff's office and.
Speaker 3Apply and do you know, but now New Hampshire has lived free or die.
Speaker 2Yes.
Speaker 3Now you know another.
Speaker 1State that has no you know, just come in and get fingerprints is the state of Washington.
Speaker 3Oh yeah, the state of Washington.
Yeah.
Speaker 1So in fact, I have gotten a Washington permit, walked in there, got fingerprinted.
Speaker 3They literally handed me the permit.
So there you go, sociper case.
Yeah, it's it.
Speaker 1And let's be honest, Washington does have its problems.
Speaker 3So yeah, yeah, pretty much, especially the western half.
Speaker 1So anyway, so we've been hearing, we've been hearing some some fantastic speakers at RPC.
Speaker 3Our own carry Anne Lizzenbee was on a panel.
Speaker 1With the Arizona Speaker of the House and the Montana Attorney General.
Speaker 3And make sure I got that right.
Speaker 2Yeah that sounds I think that was right.
Speaker 1And carry Anne just did a fantastic She just flew in from Boston last night and she'd been there doing some legislative stuff of some kind.
Speaker 3I'm assuming or maybe trying to say.
Speaker 2She said she's from her fam.
She has family there.
Speaker 1Oh, maybe that was it.
I thought she was trying to set Massachusetts right.
So anyway, okay, so we've got that, and yeah, I'm so, I'm I.
You've got to stay tuned for Amanda and she's she's here listening to this.
Speaker 3So no pressure, Amanda.
Speaker 1Because we had a very interesting talk and it was during that talk I decided you must come on the radio.
Speaker 3And she actually has her own.
In fact, I'm gonna wait.
Speaker 1I'm gonna wait to give the plug for your own radio show that you have until you come on, and you know what I'm gonna do.
I'm gonna do it right now that I'm thinking about it, because you reminded me Sportsman's the gunsmith at Sportsman's Warehouse.
It's the gunsmith at Sportsman's Warehouse.
And I like to say, when your spouse gets your gun and messes with it and breaks it, what do you think about when your spouse messes So we instantly think Casey Jane.
So anyway, so, but Casey Jane has her own, so maybe it's me messing with her.
But anyway, whatever, whatever ailes your gun or you just want it, Casey Jane wants to put up to bedazzle her guns.
Speaker 3I don't know.
Speaker 1I don't know the gunsmith will do be dazzling, but I mean maybe for her they will.
And Sarah co did reblued any kind of thing.
If you want a if you want an MOS site, you know, an optic, a red dot on your gun that wasn't made for, they can do that.
They can put the slide cut on there and all that thread the barrels, they can do stock work.
They will rechamber it for a completely different round.
The gunsmith a Sportsman's Warehouse sixteen thirty South fifty seventy West in Salt Lake City, eight oh one three zero four eighty seventy.
Or you can take it into any of the over one hundred and forty six Sportsman's Warehouse locations and they will get it to the gunsmith.
Speaker 3All right.
So when we come back, we're going to have Amanda on and stay tuned.
We'll be right there.
Speaker 1See aw, he's on an unexcuse absence, and I'm happy to welcome to gun Radio.
Utah, Amanda, suffol cool Amanda.
What what you do?
Many things?
What is your what I mean you have your own radio?
Speaker 3Jokes?
Speaker 4I do?
I do.
Speaker 5I'm the only nationally syndicated Second Amendment radio host that's female in the nation.
Speaker 3The hell you say?
I have to say that every once in a while.
Speaker 5There you go, really exactly, no kidding.
So it's like, it's amazing.
I'm a girl and I talk about guns.
Speaker 3Okay, what's the name of the show.
It's called I on the Target Radio.
Speaker 1I on the Target Radio, and it's I on the Target Radio dot com.
Speaker 3I also to watch that, and it's podcast after it's terrestrial radio.
So it's a little bit of all that and so and do I have to pay to listen to it?
No, No, it's free.
Speaker 2It's free.
Speaker 3Oh, just like gRPC.
Yeah, so cool.
All right, so we're here at gRPC.
What you do other stuff?
Speaker 1Though?
Speaker 3Tell us about NRI now.
Speaker 5Come, well, well, I was in the class of twenty twenty three for the Board of Directors of the NRA.
So I'm retired to aerospace engineer, believe it or not, and now I'm a problem solver on the NRA board.
Speaker 3So there's that.
Speaker 5I also am on the board for the A Girl in a Gun Legacy Foundation for Women for Gun Rights.
It's like, since I retired, I got to I get to play kind of in my wheelhouse, which is guns.
Speaker 3Wow.
Speaker 5And so I get to use some of my my problem solving and my planning and and my analytical experiences and using them for good not evil, if you will.
Speaker 2For.
Speaker 5The institution.
Speaker 3And I work with the Second Amendment speaking of good not evil.
Speaker 2NRA.
Speaker 1No, No, I've just given you.
Speaker 3Uh, you're on the board.
Yeah, and uh.
Speaker 1You can imagine that some of our listeners and including me, had some reservations about the n RA, and and and and maybe Intel recent fairly recently, uh has the what's going on with the NRA right now?
Speaker 3Start with saying you're welcome, okay.
Speaker 5But the reason, but part of the reason is is when I was trying to get on the board, people are like, it is in trouble.
It is a big problem.
The NRA is not doing this.
It's not viable.
It's not this, it's not that.
Why do you want to be on the board.
And I'm like, for those reasons.
It has been here for one hundred and fifty four years and it's not going to die on my watch.
So I'm going to get in there and I'm going to duke it out, and I'm going to do everything I possibly can to fix it, and I'm going to help build bring other people who have the skill sets that are needed to do that.
So I am proud to say that I am part of the team that has been working diligently to turn the NRA around.
Speaker 1Okay, is the is the board changing and it's kind of makeup or it's it's boy howdy?
Yeah?
Speaker 3Okay.
Speaker 5I mean frankly, if you, if, if you, and as you are paying attention, you're going to see something it started last year that you've never seen before, which is actually members who are running for the board who buy an ad in the NRA magazine when your ballots there.
There are there are ads that you can get to websites, and there's people who are talking about who they are and why they're running.
And there's actually a couple different contingents, the Republicans versus the Democrats.
Not really, but you know, everybody's got names for them, whatever you want to do.
But there was that, and those are not inexpensive ads.
So for an unpaid position, people are ponying up money to buy a two page spread, full color in all of the magazines in the MRIA.
So you will soon see populated for the election that starts in January of twenty twenty six.
There's a website called elect a New NRA, and that is where the reformers will show up and you'll start to see them and you'll start to get to see who they are.
And I'm going to tell you that i was elected in twenty twenty three and then I'm back on the ballot again.
I'll be in the class of twenty twenty.
Speaker 3Sex Amanda Supper cool and so is there a wreck?
Speaker 1So if you want the reformer list, are you on the reformer lit ballots?
Speaker 3There will be suggested ballot, so there will be the website for that.
Speaker 5But we still have not we don't know exactly everyone who is on the who's going to be on the ballot yet.
Speaker 3Because there's a couple of ways to.
Speaker 5Get on the ballot to be a board office, to be on the board of the NRA.
One of them is a committee within the NRA that has a nominating committee and they pick a group of people.
But then there's also others who run by petition and so if they get a certain percentage of voting members, so life members or five year members to sign a petition they too can be on the ballot.
The deadline for that is October seventh, So by the tenth, by the twelfth, somewhere in there, we'll know exactly who all is going to be on the ballot.
Speaker 3Okay.
Speaker 1So if you're an you need to be an NRA member and good standing up the tape.
Speaker 5Member or have been a dues paying member for five continuous unbroken years, okay, and then that you're a voting member.
And you'll know you're a voting member because when your magazine comes in mid January, the February edition of your magazine, when it comes, it will have a ballot in it.
If you're not a voting member, it will not have a ballot in it.
Speaker 3It will be the same magazine, no ballot.
Speaker 1Okay, Okay, excellent, So watch that Amanda suffer.
Speaker 3Cool?
Speaker 1All right, So Amanda, you you actually took part in at your kind of the big deal at AMCON.
Speaker 3The correct Now, I got to remember what is amcon?
Stand?
Speaker 5Come on in Ryan alternative mass media.
So what happened was a couple of years ago here for the Second Amendment Foundation, we're saying that there's voices that are Second Amendment people, people who want to get involved, people who want to speak, people who want to speak up, and they're like, I'm afraid to you because I don't know what to do.
I don't know what to say, I don't know how to do it.
So what we did was we get a group of volunteers who said, come sit down and we'll teach you.
Speaker 3So there's a free session.
Speaker 5So when you're coming to the gun Rance Policy Conference, if you just attend a day early, it's all free.
You just pay for your hotel room and you travel to get here and we'll we'll teach you something.
And so every year there's something different and the.
Speaker 3Group that puts that together.
Speaker 5The goal is is we douke it out amongst ourselves a lot and saying it has to It can't be something that's just a tremendous speaker.
Speaker 3What are is that speaker going to teach you?
Speaker 1Okay, so I got to tell you my observation from last year and this year is one jerr PC keeps them to the time or amkon keeps them to that fifteen minute stegment or whatever it is, and they know they have to get that information out.
So some of them use powerpoints some don't.
But it is solid, information packed stuff.
Speaker 3There's not a lot of small talk.
It makes your head hurt by the end of it, doesn't it.
Speaker 1Yeah, Well, I go through you know, typically on a regular talk, I'll go through a few lines here were in there.
I was going through pages if fantastic and I'm taking pictures of the PowerPoint.
Speaker 5This is a good idea, and oh look at that, and oh I didn't think about this, whatever that is.
Speaker 3I'm telling you, I learned something every year.
Speaker 5And so sometimes i'm the presenter and sometimes i'm the EMC and you know, so it's a it's a little bit of all that.
But I come away with just as much as I give to other people.
Speaker 1Well good, So I think it's been a fantastic conference.
Every conference is different.
Every conference has a theme.
Their theme that they're pushing this year is advocacy through action, and so I tried to tailor my talk for tomorrow morning at nine.
And you can go to g RPC dot no excuse me, go to saf dot org slash g r PC Gun Rights Policy Conference and you can actually watch live the streaming things.
Speaker 3And are they recording it too?
Can you want some link?
Yeah, you'll be able to see it later.
And Bearing Arms has got link.
Speaker 5So if you can't remember all of that, just go to Bearing Arms and look up what's going on this weekend and so much networking.
Speaker 1People are coming from all over the country and oh, oh, I got to tell you.
Speaker 3So a guy comes up to me.
Speaker 1He says, hey, Clark, how are you, I said, and I kind of look at him like you look familiar, bud, But I can't play, he says.
I says, have we met?
And he says, oh, yeah, yeah, we met, And I'm like okay, and I'm kind of trying to drive, you know, tell me where we met.
Speaker 3He says.
Speaker 1I was the the UH I represented the the US Department of Justice against you on your bump stock case.
Speaker 3And I looked at him.
Speaker 1I said, now I remember you and this guy he said.
Speaker 3He said, you know, word is though that.
Speaker 1There were more than a few of us that were rooting for you.
You know, long story short, Yes, yes we won that, and he said then he went so Trump hired him or appointed him to one of them.
I didn't realize that we had seventy or seventy five federal law enforcement agencies, and he appointed him the head of a little teeny tiny one.
But now he runs Florida's doge.
Speaker 3That's good.
So yeah, and he's here at jerr PC.
Speaker 1So anyway, got my picture with him, and then oh, thank you very much.
Right, you're so awesome.
All right, let me tell you about did you run?
You run out of ammo when you shoot?
You know, I run out of ammo quickly when I shoot machine guns off the bat's porch.
So anyway, Uh, the place to get your ammo Flashed my Brash, Flash my Brass.
Uh, you can go to They have two locations, one in Draper and one in Orum.
Speaker 4Uh.
Speaker 1Draper is four thirty eight West one hundred and twenty third south.
Uh or the ORM one is eighteen oh two sand Hill Road in Orum.
Now you can give me a call it three eight five two two one three zero nine nine.
Flash my Brass always has.
You can buy a box of AMMO, you can buy a case of Ammo, you can buy a palette of ammo.
And you can get your target stuff.
You can get your super accurate stuff, you can get your self defense stuff.
Speaker 3Everything you need at Flash my Brass.
And they are.
Speaker 1Open today until I want to say six and then I don't think they're open Sunday.
But anyway, get over to Flash my brass and when we Amanda, thank you very much for being on Gun Radio Utah.
Speaker 3Been awesome.
I on the Target dot Com.
I on the Target Radio dot Oh excuse me, I.
Speaker 1On the Target Radio dot Com.
All right, when we come back, we're gonna have Ryan Petty on.
You don't want to miss this one.
Stay tuned, especially after your comments earlier today at gRPC Ryan Petty, Ryan, you are a you joined a very.
Speaker 3Unique club, if you will.
A Parkland father.
Speaker 4That's right, yeah, one of the fathers of the one of the seventeen killed in Parkland in twenty eighteen.
Speaker 3In twenty eighteen, it was your daughter, my daughter, Elena.
Speaker 4She was fourteen, sitting in her freshman English classroom, couldn't get to a safe area, tried to get to the teacher, tried to get behind the desk, but unfortunately that was in the line of sight and she lost her life.
Speaker 3I'm sorry.
Tell us about Elena.
Speaker 4Oh look, she was wise and beyond her years.
I like to call her my second conscience in many ways, because whenever she thought I was doing something that wasn't quite fatherly or up to her standard.
She'd let me know by rolling her eyes and saying, oh, Papa.
Speaker 3Did she say papa?
She said that right?
Yeah.
Speaker 4Yeah, So I missed her.
I miss her greatly.
She was our youngest, absolutely wonderful, just had such a sense of purpose and a love for this country that at such a young age.
She was a member of the JROTC in her in her high school, and she was on one of the teams there, and just she was like the teammate everybody wanted to have because she was always sharing for her teammates, always pushing them to do better than they thought they could, and just everybody loved her and we really miss her.
Speaker 1Elena Petty, thank you.
You gave some very some very pointed things about school safety today, and I'll just I'll say one of the things that that was interesting to me that the shooter didn't go into the actual classrooms.
Speaker 3What did this guy do instead?
Speaker 4Yeah, so basically he walked, he entered the building, He walked down the hallway looking through that little glass window that most classrooms, you guys are probably picturing the hallways with the little the little glass windows in every classroom, and he started shooting at anything he could see through that through that window, he killed a couple of kids that were in the hallway.
Speaker 3Unfortunately they were out there for.
Speaker 4They were put out in the hallway to do homework or because they were being disruptives.
Speaker 3They unfortunately lost their lives.
Speaker 4But he was shooting through that glass into the classrooms at anyone he could see.
Speaker 1Okay, you also, and I've been I've been working.
I worked with you know, Representative Ryan Wilcox, I do.
He's the chair of the House Judiciary Committee here in Utah, and he's traveled out there, and you've worked with him because he has developed this fantastic along with you.
I'm sure, this fantastic school guardian program.
Now, another thing that you brought up that I actually wrote notes on, was you talked about the Safer Skies program or the flight deck Officer program, and two things in that that we do there after nine to eleven.
We addressed it instantly, didn't we.
What are those two things?
Speaker 3Oh?
Speaker 4We changed, you know, nine to eleven changed the way we fly forever.
Two things that have been effective that I really appreciate that we're changed.
One is we we harden the cockpit doors so nobody gets in now, right.
And then we allowed pilots to carry firearms, and we put air marshals on right that are undercover.
Right, you don't know that they're there, and so that that prevents that type of nine to eleven attack.
Obviously, they can't get into the cockpit, they can't take over the plane, they can't fly it into a building.
Right, kill Americans, innocent, innocent lives.
Second thing is those firearms are deterrent.
You're going to meet if you try to attack an American airline, you're going to meet deadly force and you don't know where it's coming from.
Speaker 1So two things, You lock the doors and you arm the pilots.
Okay, now make the correlation.
Make the connection to schools.
Speaker 4Yeah, The connection I made this morning for those that were listening to my presentation is every school in America should do the same thing right, and there are very few states that have taken that up.
I'm happy to say Utah is one of them.
It's fantastic.
Florida is another.
We have not had another Parkland style incident, although we have had, to my knowledge, over twelve potential threats.
Now, would they have been as bad as Parkland?
We don't know because they didn't happen.
But we have a turrent at the school.
We have armed staff right that are there undercover, and we have school resource officers at every school.
Speaker 3Sometimes there's more than one.
Speaker 4So basically, what we said is our schools shouldn't be soft targets.
Speaker 3They shouldn't be gun free zones.
They should be gun filled zones.
Speaker 1You help design the security system, well, not systems, but the protocol, the every the metric for security there because you you obviously had enough.
Speaker 3How much does it cost to lock the doors?
Speaker 4Oh, that's the other The other thing we do is we lock our classroom doors, we locked the outer building doors, or we set up another perimeter like a fence or another gate.
It caused nothing to do that, right.
The only the only objection that we get.
You know, you get occasionally a teacher wants to cool down a classroom or something.
It's hot in Florida even now, and so they'll they'll try to prop a door open.
But we've got you know, our security staff trained, We've got principles and administrators trained, and we've got most of the teachers are pretty well trained, and they keep their classroom doors locked and we've seen that as a huge deterrent.
It just it's not going to be easy to get past the fence into the building, and certainly not into a classroom.
And now I'm I'm pleased to say and I and I know you're working on this here.
Speaker 3In Utah too.
Speaker 4We've we've got our kids and our teachers trained to get into that safe area where they not in the line of fire.
And we saw this, we saw the benefit of all that training we've done for our kids when we recently had a shooting at Florida State if you remember a few weeks ago, and the professors there had no idea what to do.
I got a I got a frantic call from a mother of a friend who has a daughter there, and her professor when the shooting started was like, well, I guess you can just go.
He didn't know what to do, and she said, no, hang on, I know what to do.
Let's barricade those doors and let's get into this safe area.
So a graduate of a K through twelve school in Florida taught them what to do at Florida State and kept that classroom safe.
Speaker 3Okay, that see yet another yet another story.
Speaker 1You know, we we put a lot of money into safety, and we've been doing it before Parkland.
And we've just got about two minutes left.
But what was it, six hundred million dollars?
Speaker 3How much?
Speaker 1How much money was given to Florida schools for safety or for security before that?
Speaker 4Yeah, the year before Parkland happened, the voters in the county where we lived passed a eight hundred million dollars school safety bond.
We found out subsequent that none of that money, or very little of that money had it been used for school safety, had been used for laptops.
Speaker 1Okay, I I I want to say it's surprising, but unfortunately it isn't you know.
And I like to say that in Utah we we don't necessarily arm our teachers.
Speaker 3We just don't disarm them.
Speaker 4Yeah, so that's important because you know, I shared that story.
I related one of the one of the teachers in Parkland.
You know, I said, on the commission that investigated the tragedy, we saw the video shooter going through the school, and there was a there was a veteran proficient with firearms, but because of the law, he was disarmed that day and couldn't fight back.
And I watched him I watched the killer execute him.
He could have stopped that tragedy.
I'm certain of that.
Speaker 1Yeah, I want to say your daughter's name again, Elena Petty.
That's right, and Ryan, thank you very much for sharing what I'm sure you have shared before.
Speaker 3But it's very hard.
Speaker 1And thank you so much for your insight and your action to make these schools safer.
Speaker 3Thank you, though, Thank you.
Speaker 1When we come back on Gun Radio Utah, We've got lots more to come.
Stay tuned.
Women for Gun Rights.
What was that about shooting sports?
Now?
Speaker 2Oh, during gRPC someone had mentioned about kids shooting sports and how oh yeah, yeah, yeah in the high school so they can't get letters.
Speaker 1For those, but they have golf and they have soccer, and they have chess.
Speaker 2Well, and I think of my son, who is not so overly athletic.
He's very small and built, kind of like me, but he loves shotgun and shooting trap And how great would it be if his school was sponsoring that so that he could get a credit.
Speaker 1I think it's fantastic.
What do we need now, You're not just handing it to Utah Shooting.
I think this should be spearheaded by by Women for Gun.
Speaker 2Happy to do that.
I'd love to get working.
Speaker 3So put a letter in this or I mean, is that what you're thinking?
Speaker 2Yeah, they could get they could letter in it, just like in any other sports like football or basketball.
Get their little letter jacket or whatever it might be, right, so that they can have something to.
Speaker 1I'd be a cool jacket.
That would be such a cool jacket.
Okay, so all right.
We were also talking about the schools.
Yeah, and brand new schools.
Do you dare mention which one it was?
Speaker 3Or okay, okay, go ahead, we'll throw the under the bus.
Yeah, because there's no apologies here.
Speaker 2Yeah, no apologies.
So my son goes to middle school in Mapleton.
There's only one, so there you go.
You can devise which one that is brand new school.
It's been open maybe two three years at the most.
And we went back to school night and the first thing I noticed was every classroom has a glass wall that faces the hallway.
Speaker 3A wall, not just a win No, it's the entire.
Speaker 2Wall, and it opens and closes kind of like a screen door.
And then they do have a door, like a normal door like in a regular school.
But I first thing I turned to my husband and I was like, do you think that's bulletproof.
And then my son had been talking to a friend and he comes back to me and he's like, how old is your son?
My son is eleven turning twelve, Okay, And he turns to me and he's mom, and he's like, Mom, this doesn't seem safe to have a glass like, seems very easy to break.
Speaker 1You know.
Speaker 3Oh my gosh, I didn't.
Speaker 2I haven't asked the school, but I just blows my mind.
Speaker 1So to me, I mean, you get all this money for a brand new school, and you've got a clean slight so to speak, to start with, and you can incorporate well you could incorporate some safety features into it, yeah, or you could make it even worse than it was before, you know, I.
Speaker 2Mean I understand locking the door and checking people in and making sure we show ID, which I am one hundred percent for every single time.
But what happens if you know that kid sneaks in, you know, the kid who goes to school there that doesn't have to check in and show his ID, yeah, and can just shoot through like Ryan was saying, you know they shoot through the window.
Speaker 1Well, you know, I remember when we were when we were holding when Senator Kennedy State Senator Kennedy before he became US House Member.
Uh when the appointment to the Utah School Safety Commission, which is weird because it's the same letters as Utah Shooting Sports Council and United States Supreme Court.
Anyway, so USSC, you know, you say, oh, I'm representing uss C.
Speaker 3Anyway.
They I remember the UEA.
Speaker 1Utah Education Association, the lobby for primarily for teachers, and the Utah PTA got after us when we said we've got to start locking these doors.
They literally said, oh, you're going to turn all the schools into prisons.
And I said, no, we're gonna lock the doors so people can't come in unless they're supposed to.
Speaker 3People can still get out.
Speaker 1As opposed to a prison, which is just the other way around.
And they balked at that.
They said, oh, no, we're turning it into a prison.
And then they hated the idea of every adult, whether they be staff, faculty, or a contractor you know, somebody coming to fill the PEPSI machine or whatever, or a visitor having an ID on them having to check in at the office and getting some kind of thing that says, I checked in at the office, this is my name, and I remember the lady from I want to say it was Uia saying you can't expect people to wear a tag all the time.
And she's literally saying this to me across the table and she's wearing a tag.
She's wearing her ID tag on her around her neck.
Speaker 2Well, at my daughter's school, so my daughter goes to a different school.
She goes to school in Provo and brand new school as well.
And their security, the way they have it set up is amazing.
You walk in and you immediately have to scan your ID through this little program, even though the office ladies, I might some of the other guys know you, Yes they know me, but they like, you need to do this so that it registers.
And then I go into the office and they give me a little sticker that says volunteer visitor, and then I can go into the school and they do it every time.
It doesn't matter how many times they've been there or my mother in law was the principal of that school.
So I mean, we are known there, we know who they know us, but it shouldn't matter.
Speaker 3Uh no, no, it really shouldn't.
Speaker 1Hey tell us a little bit about more about Women for Gun Rights?
How can people how can people join?
How can people find out more about it?
Speaker 2Yeah?
So Women for Gun Rights is a really great national organization.
We do have a grassroots here in Utah and hopefully in every state to help.
We want women to be the voice of the Second Amendment.
You've heard of Mom's Man action.
They wear their red shirts, they're very anti gun.
Where the counter the count voice to that we want.
We don't want people to think that they speak for people like me.
I am a mother, I have three kids, but I don't want to be disarmed.
My husband, who works in law enforcement, you know, he's out doing his job every day.
He's not there to protect us.
I still have to call the police if somebody, somebody comes into my home.
You know, average response time five to ten minutes.
Like I need to be able to take care of my family.
And that's what we're advocating for is to be our own first responder.
To work with our legislators, let them know who we are and let them know that we care and that we're not just going to sit back and let another organization claim that what they believe is for everyone.
Speaker 3So Women for Gun Rights, as I've seen the last few years.
Speaker 1You're a you're a consistent voice on Utah's Capitol Hill, and you've got you've got branches all over the nation.
Speaker 2Yeah, we try to have one in every state, and for those states that we don't have, we're looking for actively looking for women to step up and fill that role that I as the I'm a regional director and kind of the Utah state director, and I go up to the capitol anytime.
Anytime anybody needs anything, I'm like, reach out to me.
I will be there.
I will drop everything.
Speaker 1In fact, you have actually builled in for me before when I was I don't know where I was.
Speaker 3I was out hel helling around or something.
Yeah.
Speaker 2And my son, my son, who is a big firen like love shotguns, and so I brought him to testify before to help, you know, be that voice for.
Speaker 1Ye seeing that's something a mom could do, but so many moms don't.
And now and you said something that the we've just got about a minute left.
The average response time for law enforcement is five to ten minutes.
Speaker 3Yeah, and yeah.
Speaker 1And time that's you know when when a cat is stuck up on the tree, that that doesn't seem like that long but then what Ryan Petty in his research has shown that the average school shooting occurs three to five minutes.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's right, and it's that's it's scary.
Speaker 1It's done, it's over by the time, and law enforcement is getting there quick.
Speaker 3I know that they are.
Speaker 1They are they are you know, F one raged cards to get there, and they don't wait, they just they come.
They just come charging in, not like New Mexico.
And that that was that was that was just devastating.
Anyway, Rail thank you so much, and I think.
Speaker 3We're going to enjoy the rest of g r p C.
Speaker 1And uh so, thank you very much for listening to Done Radio Utah.
Speaker 3We'll be back again next week.