Blood on Campus, again. And We’re Supposed to Act Surprised?
If you were near Florida State University just before noon on Thursday, you didn’t need a breaking news alert to know what was happening. Gunshots sharp, cold, and familiar ripped through the air near the student union. Students screamed. Some ran. Some froze. And some never got the chance to do either.
In a country where kids are taught how to hide under desks before they’re taught algebra, it’s hard to pretend this kind of tragedy is new or shocking. Two innocent people died. Five others were injured. And still, America carries on, business as usual offering “thoughts and prayers” like expired coupons.
Let’s talk about what really happened and why it keeps happening.
“An Immediate Response”: But That’s Not a Victory Lap
According to FSU President Richard McCullough, “The call went out… and immediately they responded to the scene and immediately neutralized the suspect and prevented this from being a bigger tragedy.”
Yes, police were fast. They had to be. But let’s not pat ourselves on the back for stopping something that should’ve never started in the first place.
Let’s be honest here: the phrase “a bigger tragedy” is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Two people are dead. A university is traumatized. And a community is, once again, forced to explain to its children why school is now a place to fear.
Meet the Suspect: A Student, a Cop’s Son, and a Mess Waiting to Explode
The shooter, 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner, wasn’t a stranger to the campus or to law enforcement. He was an FSU student and the son of a Leon County sheriff’s deputy. He reportedly used his father’s former service weapon to carry out the attack. Police found more guns a shotgun in the student union and an AR-15 in his car.
Let that sink in.
The shooter didn’t have a criminal background. He wasn’t some shadowy figure lurking on the edge of society. He was, by all accounts, the kind of person we pretend is “safe”: a student, a cop’s kid, involved in training programs with the sheriff’s office. The system knew him. And still this happened.
Tallahassee Police Chief Lawrence Revell said there’s no evidence of a connection between Ikner and any of the victims. That makes it worse. It was random. Brutal. Aimless.
“It’s the thing we fear most,” Revell said. “That random act of violence that seems to have no meaning or rhyme or reason to it.”
And he’s right because it could’ve been anyone.
What the Hell Was He Doing with That Many Guns?
Let’s talk about the guns.
Ikner had at least three: a service weapon, an AR-15, and a shotgun. All in his possession. All ready to go. And we’re supposed to pretend like this isn’t a predictable outcome?
Leon County Sheriff Walter McNeil told reporters, “It’s not a surprise to us that he had access to weapons.”
Really? That’s the best we’ve got?
He’s the son of a deputy. He’s been involved with the sheriff’s youth council. And yet, he managed to walk into multiple buildings and green spaces, firing shots as if he were playing a violent video game with real lives on the line.
Let’s call it what it is: a preventable act of violence made possible by a society that hands out guns like party favors.
Ikner’s Past: A Disturbing Glimpse into the Life of the Shooter
Digging into Ikner’s background reveals a childhood marked by chaos. Court documents show a bitter, 17-year custody battle between his parents. His mother once described the young Ikner as “in the middle of a war.”
And the war, it seems, never ended.
According to former classmates from Tallahassee State College, Ikner expressed disturbing views in class. He defended Nazi symbols. Said Rosa Parks was “in the wrong.” Mocked pro-Palestinian and Black Lives Matter protesters. You don’t need a psychology degree to know something was off.
Yet somehow, he kept moving through the system. Quietly. Legally. Armed.
The Victims: Remember Their Names, Not Just the Shooter’s
Two men were killed:
Robert Morales, a dining coordinator at the university, known for his kindness and Cuban pastries. His brother called him “a jolly man who always greeted others with a smile.”
Tiru Chabba, a loving father of two, working with a food service vendor. His family, preparing for Easter, is now planning a funeral instead.
“They were deeply loved, and their absences leave a void that cannot be filled,” said FSU Senior Vice President Kyle Clark.
A memorial has grown near the student union: balloons, flowers, candles. But grief doesn’t end when the candles burn out.
“Stable Condition” Isn’t the Same as “Okay”
Six people were taken to the hospital. Five were shot. One was hurt trying to run for safety. FSU President McCullough said the victims “are hurting and in pain and scared, but are doing remarkably well and are expected to fully recover.”
But “recover” is a loaded word.
Some injuries don’t show up on X-rays. What about the panic attacks? The nightmares? The fear of walking into class and hearing a loud noise? The mental scars aren’t easy to treat and they don’t fade just because the media moves on.
A System That Keeps Failing
This was Florida’s sixth mass shooting of the year. The 81st in the U.S. in 2025, according to the Gun Violence Archive. Just a number until it’s your town. Your school. Your child.
Seven years ago, it was Parkland High School. Seventeen lives taken there. Now it’s FSU. And in between? Countless others.
And still we debate. We distract. We deflect.
What We’re Not Saying Out Loud
Let’s put it plainly: this country is in love with its guns, and allergic to accountability.
You can’t flood a nation with firearms and then act shocked when someone pulls the trigger. You can’t raise kids in chaos, let them fester in hate, and then wonder why they snap. And you sure as hell can’t pretend this isn’t political.
This isn’t just about one disturbed student. It’s about how our society enables violence, ignores warning signs, and puts the burden of survival on students and teachers.
Final Thought
We can say the names. Light the candles. Hold the vigils. But unless we start facing the truth that guns, hate, and silence are killing us this story will happen again. And again. And again.
And next time, it might be your school.
So yeah “thoughts and prayers,” sure. But maybe mix in a little action before it’s your kid on the news.