Given the fact(s) that....
A) ...bullets don't always hit their intended target, or....
B) ...they often times pass through their target (in this case, soft human tissue) barely even slowing down, then strike some non-intended target (like another person) on the other side, and....
C) ....they are known to ricochet around, again, often striking some non-intended target, again, like another person....
1) ....tell us why you think it would be such a great idea to have even MORE bullets flying around inside a confined space, surrounded by concrete walls with metal lockers on them and steel door frames and various other hard surfaces for these bullets to bounce off of striking God knows what or WHO, and....
2).... who will be held LIABLE when autopsy reports conclude that someone's child or another adult school employee died or was permanently injured by a bullet that was fired, not from the gun of the attacker, but from the gun of a teacher or administrator who was returning fire, and lawsuits start being filed? The teacher/administrator themselves? The county/taxpayers?
Have any of you geniuses ever considered any of those highly likely scenarios?
Or do you think it will be like on TV where the bullets always either hit the bad guy and lodge in his innards or just fly harmlessly off into space where they magically disappear?
Just wondering.
If nothing else, it should be entertaining to see the creative bullshit nonsense replies the barrel strokers come up with.
Your post and questions are based on a hypothetical situation where the staff are active shooters and would be criminal shooters are not a threat, which would be a huge problem. Obviously, the risks of school staff shooting a gun at an active mass shooter are less than they would be if a mass shooter was shooting at an unarmed crowd, but in the hypothetical situation that you described where the school staff member is the mass shooter himself, it would be a disaster.
If there was an actual mass shooting taking place inside a school and a school staff member were to fire upon the mass shooter, there would certainly be a risk of harming an innocent student. This risk needs to be compared to the risk of how many more students would be in harm's way if the staff member was not armed, as well as the risk that schools can indeed hire disturbed people who could become the problem mass shooter themselves. Although I am a right winger who is on the side of gun rights, I would need to know that any school staff members who were going to be armed and in a position to defend my child have gone through extensive background checks and firearm training before I would be comfortable having them around my child. I will not automatically discard the risks of arming school staff just because I am a righty, but I can see the potential merits of arming them if the correct training and background checks were done. I am not sold yet, since I am not impressed with how schools are currently selecting their staff.