Expecting an armed presence at every school in America is on the opposite crazy spectrum of "ban all guns".
Table 1.2. Number of school-associated violent deaths of students, staff, and nonstudents, by type: School years 1992–93 to 2009–10
https://nces.ed.gov/programs/crimeindicators/crimeindicators2011/tables/table_01_2.asp
25 PEOPLE (not just students) died in school shootings in 2009.
The same year, NOAA recorded 34 people died in lightning strikes.
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/hazstats/light09.pdf
If we're going to put an armed guard in every school across America, we need to first mandate we house every mobile American in a grounded faraday cage first. Your chances of being struck by lightning is about equal to being a victim of a mass school shooting.
The NRA has a long history of compromising with legislators. This has upset enough folks that some people refuse to support the NRA for throwing some folks under the bus in the past. Here is one angry gun owner who took the time to list some incidents:
http://www.keepandbeararms.com/information/xcibviewitem.asp?id=3247
At the same time, this shows the NRA is NOT the boogey man the Democrats make the NRA out to be. The NRA worked in 2007 with Carolyn McCarthy to strengthen the mental health issues after Virginia Tech.
Video games have nothing to do with anything. We live in a country and time that has probably been as peaceful as society has ever been. Look at what society considered entertainment back in the day. Why settle for football and video games when you could watch real people kill each other for entertainment. Why settle for the modernisms of humane capital punishment when you could take the kids to the town square and enjoy a good burning or hanging. Wayne is simply trying to throw someone else under the bus.
"We think it's reasonable to support the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act. ... We think it's reasonable to expect full enforcement of federal firearms laws by the federal government. ... That's why we support Project Exile -- the fierce prosecution of federal gun laws...we think it's reasonable because it works. ... We only support what works and our list is proud."
—NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre
Congressional Testimony, May 27, 1999