minakichan (post: 1371760) wrote:I think-- and this is total speculation, as the article doesn't mention this at all-- that perhaps the principal acted not because she thought a 2 inch toy had any potential threat of hurting someone, but because of, I suppose, what she thought of the boy's mindset. In other words, if he had been drawing a picture of a gun, he might have been called out and possibly suspended for the same reason. For one, I guess, showing off guns and talking about it in school is kind of inappropriate, and for another, some people think that kids who are into guns have all these issues and are going to grow up "wrong." I guess. So the principal might have been trying to punish a "thought crime" rather than attempt to protect students or whatnot.
It's sort of like, if kids were playing video games in school, bringing Pokemon would be OK, but bringing GTA might not be.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1371781) wrote:Guys, I think Nate is bringing up some very good points. I think a lot of people who are seemingly disregarding what he has to say needs to reevaluate the situation and see it from the eyes of the other side.
Fish and Chips (post: 1371568) wrote:I'm not saying it's likely, I'm just saying it's possible.
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1371779) wrote:A suspension still doesn't match the offense though. Punishment should be in line with the crime. It would not have been out of line for them to simply tell him to put the gun away. Kids need to understand the 'whys' of what they're being told and punishment, when necessary, should be fair.
Guys, I think Nate is bringing up some very good points. I think a lot of people who are seemingly disregarding what he has to say needs to reevaluate the situation and see it from the eyes of the other side.
Nate (post: 1371744) wrote:And yet, judging from the responses of everyone here, they're doing just that.
I haven't seen a single person besides Roy say "Gee, she had the right idea, but she took it a bit far." No, everyone seems content to say "HA HA SHE'S SO STUPID LOOK AT HER DUH IT'S A LEGO NOBODY HAS COMMON SENSE."
This isn't directed at you, Fish (far from it, you and Roy seem to be the only ones actually reading posts in it), but judging from people's responses even AFTER my post, it seems I'm merely posting just to read my own words. Everybody seems content to read the opening post, read the headline of the story, and then just say "She dumb, Legos are small, she dumb!"
It seems everyone here is content to think that the principal walked by him at a school lunch table, saw a Lego gun, and said "A gun, that's dangerous, he'll kill us all that psycho!" Despite the fact that this is obviously not what even came close to happening.
etc.
minakichan wrote:And while sometimes I agree with you and Nate, sometimes I don't. I'm not saying that I do or don't in this particular situation (I feel like we don't know enough about the case to evaluate it completely), but that in this case, it is certainly possible for someone to look at this objectively and still fail to come to the same conclusion that you and Nate have. It's not like one side is perfectly logical and objective and the other is a screaming mob.
TGJesusfreak (post: 1371829) wrote:The fact is that the principal just wants to control everyone. I mean, you can't read your bible in school any more!
Rusty Claymore wrote:You can't shut down school because a little kid says, "I saw a Gun!" You have to confim it first, which is probably where the mess started, some teacher didn't think to confirm the actual gun.
Corrie wrote:You admit that there's a wide gap in the story from "playing with legos" to "calling the boy's mother," but there's just as little evidence to support your theory as there is to support anyone else's. It may very well be that the school went into disorder and mayhem because a teacher heard a little boy had a gun, and it may very well be that a teacher thought a little boy playing with a toy gun was inappropriate.
TG wrote:The fact is that the principal just wants to control everyone. I mean, you can't read your bible in school any more!
Nate (post: 1371877) wrote:I admit I don't have all the facts either. But here we have two options: one, the principal did everything correct, because she was performing her job duties. Two, the principal is an idiot and did everything wrong.
Now, why would someone think the principal is an idiot? The only way to come to that conclusion is to assume she is an idiot in the first place, and that requires circular logic. Why is the principal an idiot? She thought a two-inch toy gun was dangerous. Why did she think a two-inch toy gun was dangerous? Because she is an idiot.
Nate (post: 1371877) wrote:What.
WHAT?
No, seriously, what?
Okay, by your logic:
You can't evacuate a school if a fire alarm goes off. You have to confirm there's an actual fire before you can make everyone exit the building.
You can't evacuate a school if someone calls in a bomb threat. You have to search the building to confirm there's an actual bomb before you can make students leave.
What.
WHAT?
No, seriously, what?
Okay, by your logic:
You can't evacuate a school if a fire alarm goes off. You have to confirm there's an actual fire before you can make everyone exit the building.
You can't evacuate a school if someone calls in a bomb threat. You have to search the building to confirm there's an actual bomb before you can make students leave.
Nate (post: 1371877) wrote:Again, the ONLY reason to assume she didn't do her job properly is "She is an idiot." If asked why she is an idiot, the only response could possibly be "She didn't do her job properly." Which, once again, is our good friend circular reasoning.
The fourth-grader and a classmate were playing with their Lego figures and miniature toy guns in the school cafeteria Tuesday.
Then Patrick was taken to the principal's office and told to fill out paperwork admitting an "A-4 infraction."
"She told me to write that I had a gun," Patrick said. "She said, 'A gun is a gun.'"
Only his gun was a teeny-tiny plastic machine gun, about as deadly as a crayon.
"The principal made an error in judgment by overreacting when the toy was found," acknowledged Education Department spokesman Matthew Mittenthal.
I understand that news articles do distort the truth at times, and that these statements are subjective... however:
"The principal got so upset" - boy
"I thought the principal was mad at me" - boy
"Lack of common sense is the issue" - parent
"My child was harassed and bullied over nothing" - parent
"It's clear from the media attention that this is ridiculous and overkill" - parent
The kid was in tears, alright!?
Rusty wrote:Qualifier: Little kid.
My logic dictates you shouldn't get hysterical because a little kid says something. That doesn't mean you don't take precautions.
Should you go hysterical when the fire alarm goes off or there is a bomb threat?
While kids are neither innocent angels who always tell the truth, nor are they conniving devils who constantly lie, if a kid says something that could be dangerous it needs to be taken seriously.
There's a difference between "Aliens are outside in the playground!" and "Jimmy has a gun on the playground!" One of these is an overactive imagination; the other might not be.
As for your statement about should you go hysterical if there's a bomb threat? Gee I dunno. Try going to an airport and saying "I have a bomb, ha ha!" and see what happens. I don't think they take those things too lightly. Probably because lives are at stake.
While not EVERYTHING a kid says should be taken seriously, kids need to be treated with respect. In the old days of Sesame Street, Snuffleupagus was only seen by the kids and the adults never believed them when they talked about him. Eventually, the producers of the show thought this sent the wrong message, that by seeing the adults always think the kids were lying or imagining it, that kids would be reluctant to open up to adults about more serious matters. To alleviate this, there was an episode where the adults finally met Snuffy and apologized to the kids for not believing them.
When you say things like "Qualifier: Little kid" it's dangerous thinking because that opens up all sorts of doors to passing off serious problems as nothing more than overactive imaginations.
Nate (post: 1371621) wrote:So hmm. How many people here would be calling the principal an idiot and irresponsible if that had turned out to be a real gun and the kid had shot other kids? All of them? Most of them? "I thought it was a toy." Yeah, I bet a lot of people would be saying "What an idiot, he needs to get his head out of his [rectum] thinking it was just a toy, now kids are dead and it's his fault!"
Just throwing that out there.
Yes, we're so paranoid. I mean, it's not like this sort of thing has ever happened before or anything, right?
Then Patrick was taken to the principal's office and told to fill out paperwork admitting an "A-4 infraction."
"She told me to write that I had a gun," Patrick said. "She said, 'A gun is a gun.'"
Rusty Claymore wrote:Hey there, calm down.
Taking the words of a little kid as the words of a little kid is not dangerous. Litle kids say stuff without thinking of the consequences of how they say it.
Either case you usually don't find out till it's past, and proper unbaised education on guns and what happens to someone when they are shot is the best remedy.
You can do anything while speaking softly, and that is where the whole sha-bang went wrong. People (who probably didn't know how to handle a gun, so understandably yet inexcusably) just got a little too excited, and the media flies descended.
Taking a kid to an office, alone with an intimidating figure, and instructing them to write and sign a statement that, you know, kind of tells the truth but is really intentionally vague and incriminating and uses terminology that a kid isn't going to understand, that's... really not what should be going on in America.
come on, these are practically mafia tactics.
Though coincidentally, the threat of cement shoes at the bottom of the Hudson would do wonders for our national grade average.Nate (post: 1372109) wrote:...wait what? How are these mafia tactics? I didn't hear any statements about the principal saying anything like "Better not bring this toy to school again...otherwise your grades might suffer" or "It'd be a real shame if something was to happen to your family...yep, a real shame indeed." Nor do I think the principal had a weapon of her own with which to threaten.
I'm almost positive Roy Mustang doesn't appreciate you talking about him behind his back like that.Lunis (post: 1372208) wrote:And ROFL at whoever started this srs(ly stupid) debate about a lego, thinking they needed to flex their debate-muscle in order to prove they're deep and intellectual. Or maybe someone just has an unhealthy one-upmanship obsession.
Lunis (post: 1372208) wrote:Hey, if they were going to freak out about the gun, they should at least be consistent and have a cow about the axe, too. XD
And ROFL at whoever started this srs(ly stupid) debate about a lego, thinking they needed to flex their debate-muscle in order to prove they're deep and intellectual. Or maybe someone just has an unhealthy one-upmanship obsession.
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