Why is the state criminalising normal childhood behaviour? -The GuardianI see it as an advance for equality. After all, the state has been criminalizing normal adult behavior for millennia.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
We're Down on Our Knees
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23 comments:
nathan detriot???
It's just like that old African proverb: "It takes a precinct to raise a child."
It is equality advancing, but it is no advance.
By some chance I had brought my dice along.
seems like there's a fine line between selecting for cops with low enough test scores that they won't get bored with police work, and assigning cops to a beat in an environment where they might be exposed to learnin'.
Gee, Attorney General Holder ... HOLD YOU!
Doesn't quite work.
(BTW, saw the revival when it toured through Boston. Mediocre at best; the singers didn't have a lot of charisma)
On reflection, "Gee, Attorney General Holder ... HOLD THIS!", accompanied by the traditional gesture, would fit very well. Let me knock one back with lunch and channel my inner Sondheim; I'll get back to yinz.
Well, someone's gotta walk the beat on behalf of the Dean
"Texas is reassessing its own reaction to fears of feral youth that critics say has created a "school-to-prison pipeline".
Beats working for a living.
"Zero tolerance started out as a term that was used in combating drug trafficking and it became a term that is now used widely when you're referring to some very punitive school discipline measures. Those two policy worlds became conflated with each other," said Fowler.
The school cops need drones, in my opinion. There's no way to win the battle against misbehavior without drones. Drones. Drones.
Also: punk'll
It’s a new apprentice program for a progressive nation. It’s the future today.
Geez, I can tell none of youz ever went to Our Lady of Great Agony or any of its sister schools ...
Any graduate of a 50's parochial school will tell you this is back to the future ...
Fuck, I went to a Saint Somethingorother in the 1970s and I can tell you this is back to the future.
my public high school had a college track, business track and a vocational track. i think it's great that kids today have the criminal track to fall back on, and that the state is willing to be involved. instead of AP college credits, they earn line items for their criminal record. gets them on the books so they aren't an unknown quantity come graduation day.
That's a very funny comment Montag.
But really - let's call a greaser a greaser and agree that the vocational track WAS more or less the criminal track way back when - I mean - where else did Hollywood get the images for some of its most biggest blockbusters?
Hey, 3 squares and linen service. Beats being poor.
No, EL. In the 50s there were no black people. And if there were, they weren't permitted to enter a track. Nostalgia films tell me so.
Yeah you're right, non@5:59.
I gotta remember to stop mixing up Ralph Ellison and Claude Rains ...
But wait a sec, non@5:59 - I just realized that Jesse Owens is the counter-example to your claim .. he was allowed to enter lots of tracks ... kinda like greyhounds were, if ya think about it ...
"But really -let's call a greaser a greaser and agree that the vocational track WAS more or less the criminal track way back when -I mean -where else did Hollywood get the images for some of its most biggest blockbusters?" Except a vocational education yields graduates WITH A REAL SKILL! Not paper pushing, navel gazing, or speculation aka theft. Plus most of those guys are earning a secure six figures while the Womens Studies graduates Et al are looking for Occupy locations to do the human mic at.
PS. The Police; not a vocation.
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