It really comes down to identifying rational priorities.Strat wrote:E.H. Ruddock wrote:I'm just saying, if the story didn't tell me that it was a muslim kid from Sudan, I would still say that looks more like something suspicious than it looks like a clock. I get the school safety side of it, but what they did to him afterwards was a violation of human rights.philpritchard wrote:So the only way this would be a non-story is if it was an Asian kid.E.H. Ruddock wrote:Question. If it was some suburbia white "christian" kid that brought it, do you think the reaction would have been the same? I tend to think so only because most school shootings in the past where white dudes. This is just a bad combo of the kid's ethnicity/religion and people in schools being overly cautious because of school shootings.McParadigm wrote:It's hard to fault the paranoid worry that it might...might...be a bomb.
It's pretty hard not to fault the approach they took to addressing that.
I just feel like if they really thought it was a bomb they would have handled it differently. Bomb squad, school on lock down....i dont know. I wasn't in there but confiscating it, keeping it in plce custody, arresting him and interrogating him...
Also, I know you are agree im just continuing with my ramblings kthanks.
First in line is to ensure that the school is safe. If you have the mystery item and know whose it is, you either feel that safety is established or you evacuate the school. Not evacuating the school, at that point, is tantamount to declaring that no remaining danger is believed to exist.
Once safety is established, your next priority is to not risk traumatizing a child who is in your custody, ever, and especially when there is NOT certainty that he is guilty of anything.
Lastly, you have no reason to not involve the parents of a child that age in the information gathering stages (this admittedly overlaps with the 'no undue trauma' rule). This is a minor, who (again) is not known to be guilty of anything.
