Saturday, January 13, 2007
Here's Public Education For You
It started over a dress code violation, hardly reason enough to throw away an
academic career and certainly no reason to be charged with a felony."I have
goals I want to achieve and this is stopping that," says 17-year old Sabrina
Herndon.Herndon was wearing a jacket and strapless top and was changing in the
girl's locker room at Palm Beach Gardens High School.A teacher noticed the
strapless top which is a dress code violation. Herndon says with the jacket
though, the top is within dress code.A male assistant principal then entered the
girl's locker room, and within minutes Herndon was in a choke hold."He came
behind me and he picked me up with it and he tried to carry me out of the locker
room and then I fell, then he came from under me and choked me a second
time."The question of course is what prompted the assistant principal to resort
to such tactics? Herndon says nothing and says she has witnesses to back her
up."I did nothing wrong to where he had to use physical force. I had no weapons,
I made no threats or anything to him."The school district also has witnesses who
say the assistant principal was justified to use force.They're not telling us
specifically what happened because Herndon is a juvenile. They are saying her
behavior warranted felony battery charges.Herndon says she doesn't understand
why she's the criminal, when she's the one who was choked."It's his word against
mine and mine is being overlooked." Herndon is now facing expulsion and her
college career is in question. A high price to pay for a fashion faux pas."For
the whole thing to go out of proportion over a dress code issue is ridiculous,"
she says.
-WPTV
America as a whole is on its way toward Fascism, but the public education system is already there. School staff has all the power in the world, and students have no rights at all. And it's not just this school, students will agree that every school has become like this. Staff can search your locker and even your car without a warrant, they are the judge, jury, and executioner when it comes to punishment, and what is to be punished doesn't come from a rulebook but from their gut. And now, apparently violent punishment is a-okay.
Will this assistant principal be punished for actions that were blatantly criminal? Of course not. If the government wants to walk into a place where there's supposed to be privacy and strangle a teenage girl based on a trivial rule, then that's okay because they're the government. Besides, by scapegoating this "violator" as the wrongdoer in the situation, they feel justified in what they did and the people just forget what happened.
This is the America me and my fellow students are living in right now. You can laugh when we say school is prison, but is it such a stretch? No. We students need to stay vocal about outrages like this, or else when we enter the real world, we'll find that it has become Fascist as well. It's only a matter of time before the government enlarges itself to this size, and every man, woman, and child is being watched by big brother. And not just watched, but oppressed. We the people must not let this happen to our country.
part of education is discipline,
(rightly or wrongly) because it
occurs every where, starting in the military. We all like our freedom, but a reason for discipline and rules is to avoid
anarchy. I am not an educator, but I believe the young lady's
case was handled wrongly, and someone should be held accountable.
My point is that teachers are enforcing the wrong rules. They think they have absolute power. What they need to do is start enforcing grading procedures, not silly things like this.
Not really. Why would I be bitter about good grades?
Rules are rules, no matter how significant or insignificant they may be.
Which gives teachers the right to make up rules? Or physically manhandle students? I don't think so.
The biggest recommendation I can give you though, is to get over it. Life, and especially the high school part of life, isn't fair. Also, most institutions, or anywhere that instates any type of regulations, has problems with enforcement. When you're working with a large staff you can't keep tabs on what everyone is doing at all times.
So what? We should do nothing? We shouldn't say anything? We should let injustices happen? I don't think that's what this country was built on.
"Rules are rules...get over it."
This is the kind of attitude that makes me sick. This idea that we must keep the status quo for everything in society. It's just like with illegal immigration. People oppose it just because it's the law. Yeah, well what if the law is wrong? Why does no one stop to think about that?
Rules are rules get over it? Come on! A girl was strangled in a locker room over a dress code and you think it's okay just because the government probably has the legal ground to do it? My moral ground transcends the legal system. What this person did was an initiation of unprovoked violence against another person, and whether you are just another person or a government official it is still wrong.
But what disturbs me even more than your blatant statist opinions, is your blatant inconsistancies. One minute you're on a spiel about how big brother is your friend, then the next you're bashing George Bush on grounds of civil rights violations. Where the hell do you stand? Or do you not even have real political values, but have become nothing more than a tool for the useless party system? Either way you're nothing more than a bitch to the government. How sad.
Listening to phone coversations without a court order is NOT the same thing as searching lockers for drugs. When that is done, dogs are brought in and the officer opens a locker with resonable cause, not just because he feels like it. More often than not, drugs are actually found, and it's not that rare of a situation. I am not confused about where I stand.
At this point the government is saying their actions were justified, and when that happens, they usually get off scott free. Because when it's the people versus the government, it doesn't matter who is right and what is legal, the government wins.
In my aproximately 16 years of schooling I NEVER met a teacher who thought they had "absolute power".
Now obviously rules should exist, but only to hold order, but to use physical violence against kids to enforce them? That's something I can't stand for.
Either today or Wednesday actually. If Mike shows up today with mic #3 I'll ask you to come over and if pre show prep for the first episode doesn't take all day we can record the first one today. If not, I think we have decided that the regular recording schedual will be on Wednesday nights (7-9 PM) so we'll do it then if we're slow on things.
Typical or not, this is not acceptable, not once. This girl's life is probably ruined because of this, and the school will get off scott free. I find that outragous.
And I don't believe that it is atypical for teachers to abuse their powers. Heck, I have a teacher that makes students do pushups for swearing.
School should not be a place that uses physical dicipline. If teachers want to dock peoples grades for misbehaving, or give detentions to students who have trampled on the liberties of others, then that's fine if it's again not overly used and abused. But in the year 2007 we do not need to use any sort of physical violence as a means of dicipline. It's barbaric.
""The Government" is saying it's actions were justified?"
Yes, the school district is government, isn't it?
Right I know. They're two seperate issues I'm arguing though. One, what the teacher did was wrong and two, the teachers have too much power. Still, I think you could connect the two. If the government never holds the teachers accountable, they tend to think they hold absolute power.
Cody: Sounds good. Should be fun.
Carl: That's a bit of a crude way to put it Carl, but I see your point. I think the girl could use that as a defense, but the story indicates that she was changing out of the dress-code violating outfit, meaning she had worn it before. I mean I don't know many girls who would wear something like that to a sports practice or whatever.
Doesn't make it right what the teacher did though.
I think she should get a lawyer, and this should be brought up in court. Because right now the school is handling everything and they're pretty much the judge, jury and executioner when it comes to situations like this.
here for an update:
http://forums.winamp.com/showthread.php?s=73d971b3fdbc21514d23b0ca841b60a2&threadid=263576
..the girl has been suspended before, several girls were thrown off the basketball team for an on-court brawl. Girls will be girls, as they say, but do I sniff Duke LaCross here?
But I can't say anything with 100% certainty because I wasn't there. This case deserves a fair trail in court.
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