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Zero
Tolerance for Zero Tolerance
This
rantís about a subject a little more controversial
than spoilers in previews. Iíll admit that up front.
Youíve been warned.
There
has been a lot of violence perpetrated on kids in
the last few years, and more than ever before, itís
been by other kids. That sucks, no doubt about it.
However, itís also shown that thereís apparently some
inert genetic trait that every human has, only activating
when that person has kids. I call this particular
bit of DNA coding the Overreacting Code, and itís
a bigger threat to kids than any number of automatic
weapons.
The
Overreacting Code forces parents to put pressure on
educators. The educators then come up with something
as inane as ìZero Tolerance.î This means that the
school system will tolerate no potential threats of
any kind. Sounds okay at first blush, maybe, but think
about it a bit more. Little Billy isnít exactly like
the other kids. Heís picked on sometimes, and that
makes him angry. Suddenly, Little Billy looks like
a Columbine killer, so Little Billy is kicked out
of school.
Zero
Tolerance means that if you fit a certain profile,
you are a potential murder suspect, whether thereís
been a murder or not. This is a profile consisting
of some of these characteristics: smart, picked on,
non-conformist, computer-user. Different.
I
am a successful member of my chosen profession. Iím
married, own my own home, and have no criminal record.
Most people would consider me an upstanding member
of society. If I were a high school student, I would
be Enemy Number One.
As
online columnist Bill Bickel put it in a piece called
ìZero Tolerance Must End Now,î ìOutrages aren't anecdotal
anymore: They're epidemic.î Shortly after Columbine,
a teacher asked her class what they were feeling about
the incident. After many kids said that they were
scared or sad, one boy got up and said that he was
also scared and sad, but could understand how the
perpetrators felt, because itís so horrible to be
picked on and ridiculed. This boy was suspended immediately
for sharing these feelings.
Two
boys in Florida were expelled (and cops -- in flak
jackets -- were summoned to the scene) for talking
about the Columbine incident in school. Kids have
been expelled and turned over to the police for doodling
missiles in their notebooks. A third-grader from Ohio,
participating in a school fortune-cookie-writing project,
was suspended from school for writing the words "You
will die an honorable death." A 7-year-old Cincinnati
girl was expelled from school for holding a cap gun
on school bus. A 7-year-old girl.
And
some examples hit even closer to home. A school principal
learned that a group of kids was playing D&D.
He called the kids into his office and told them that
they had two choices: Quit playing the game and get
counseling, or be expelled. Thatís right, playing
D&D -- along with video games with violence, listening
to heavy metal, and wearing black clothing -- is part
of the Education Systemís new profile for dangerous
students. This profile comes straight from the FBI,
no less. (How whacked is that: The FBI is meddling
in all this now?)
As
if things werenít bad enough for these kids already.
Letís face it, school can really suck when youíre
on the outside, youíre different, youíre smart, and
youíre not all that athletic. Nobody seems to be suggesting
that we help these kids cope with their problems or
learn to fit in, or -- heaven forbid -- actually suggest
that nonconformity is a good thing. No, they want
the frigginí FBI to watch these kids, because weíre
all supposed to assume that theyíre killers. That
genetic Overreacting Code hasnít activated in me yet.
Iím not willing to give up my civil rights and the
civil rights (and well-being) of others, all in the
name of ìmaking things safe for my kidsÖî
Iím
even a little leery of writing this rant, because
thereís a chance some kid will be looking at my site
while at school, and he could get in trouble for reading
this.
Oh,
and the Overreacting Code doesnít stop there, either
-- itíll put pressure on the government to regulate
violence in the media (from movies to TV to games),
mark my words. While Iím not a big fan of graphic
violence in movies myself, the Overreacting Code hasnít
forced my brain to forget the First Amendment. But
I suppose thatís actually Another RantÖ.
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