Posted on 09/22/2014 1:56:59 PM PDT by KeyLargo
Education School tells Missouri boy his 9/11 souvenir violates school weapons policy
A souvenir shell casing handed out by veterans at a 9/11 ceremony landed a seven-year-old Missouri boy in hot water when he took the keepsake to school.
Sherry Falke said her son, Zane, forgot he had the souvenir in his pocket when he showed up for class on Tuesday, Fox4KC.com reported. The boy was given the souvenir at a Sept. 11 memorial ceremony in Carrollton, Mo.
"He felt it in his pocket, and he took it out and was showing some of his friends at school," Falke told the station.
"The principal proceeded to reprimand him as though he were bringing live ammunition to school," she said. "I understand that's in the policy, in the handbook, that they cant bring guns to school. I fully support that, but it's an empty blank casing."
Falke said her son's teacher seized the shell casing and took him to the principals office. She claims they Zane he could be suspended from school for 10 days, but instead gave him a silent lunch where he sat by himself and missed two recesses.
The poor kid. This was needlessly cruel.
Well said, but don’t forget that eventually cooler heads prevailed and the kid received a lighter sentence, once the situation was understood. But how the school staff is trained to respond to a stiuation like this, as it unfolds, is according to written school policy.
Policy is policy, it’s much stricter now than in the Davey Crockett era everybody claims to have grown up in, and they did the right thing in enforcing it.
Times have changed a bit.
I haven’t had Spam in a long time...but I remember a ‘key’ that you had to turn around five thousand times.
They have a pull ring now?
“And we (some of us) are exercising ours in thinking your opinion is idiotic.”
Imagine how little that would have meant to somebody like George Washington, John Adams, or Patrick Henry.
You are being ridiculous. A spent shell casing is harmless.
Are you for real?
Can you prove the teacher who took it away knew it was harmless?
Not to be hyper-technical, but nobody saw a bullet anywhere in this episode.
I bet the teacher knows which insects sting and might hurt the kids, and probably knows that if a kid eats paste, its ok - while drinking draino is an emergency.
Why wouldn’t we expect a teacher to have similar rudimentary knowledge about what type of brass colored metal is bad for you? You really can’t use the teacher’s ignorance of what a bullet looks like as an excuse for their over-reaction.
So, instead of just confiscating the item and confirming whether or not it presents any danger, and then upon finding it’s no danger, return it to the boy, they initiate a “zero tolerance” response?
Sounds like a real rational administration there...but I bet they were out front and center patting themselves on the back. Telling the cameras how they did such a good job “protecting” their students...
A bunch of panty waisted, know nothing “educators” who can’t or won’t take the time to EDUCATE themselves on something.
Ignorance can be cured, stupid is forever...folks like this insist on remaining stupid because there’s no work or effort involved in remaining stupid but there is in dispelling ignorance.
“Are you for real?”
Were the 9/11 hijackers? They used the same basic technology.
Of course an adult might gave been concerned, but when any SANE adult would have looked at the ‘bullet’ they would have seen that it was completely harmless and asked the child to tell the rest of the class about the ceremony where he got it, and would have given the child extra credit points.
Do you really think that casing is more dangerous than a pencil or a pen?
But we live in a world where PICTURES of guns are considered dangerous, so I guess panic is expected.
O2
“Not to be hyper-technical, but nobody saw a bullet anywhere in this episode.”
The teacher saw a bullet, and her first responsibility is to protect the other students, so she took it. It doesn’t matter that it turned out to be an empty casing, which wasn’t established until later. She and the principal both followed rules meant to protect other students, and you guys all think she’s stupid for doing that.
“But we live in a world where PICTURES of guns are considered dangerous, so I guess panic is expected.”
We also live in a world where crazy nuts shoot up schools and irresponsible parents let their kids carry all kinds of dangerous things to school. That’s where these “pantywaist” policies come from.
I’m not saying the shell casing was dangerous, but the policies exist for a reason.
I assume the public schools are paying you well.
She saw no such thing...she “saw” what she’s been conditioned to “see”...she reacted out of a misplaced fear of an inanimate object. She chose not to respond rationally, but rather robotically. Her ignorance and that of the school administration is what created this situation.
Currently, she and the rest of that school’s administration are willfully ignorant.
If they choose to remain ignorant, then yes, she and the rest are STUPID.
And they sure as hell have no place “teaching” in a school if they choose to remain stupid vs. educating themselves.
“So, instead of just confiscating the item and confirming whether or not it presents any danger, and then upon finding its no danger, return it to the boy, they initiate a zero tolerance response?”
Which is exactly how the school handled it, if you read the article. They realized it was harmless and gave the kid a minimal sentence of silent lunch. There was no zero-tolerance response and I would have been very critical if there was.
“...a P-38 GI Can Opener...”
Lord, I had almost forgotten about the “John Wayne”...
To satisfy the hyper-neurotic anti-gun agenda of NEA Progressives?
Free Republic is a private forum and you and I are here at the pleasure of our host, Jim Robinson. This is not a public space.
PS I own three guns and my grandfather was a veteran of both World Wars, sharpshooter in the first one, taught me to handle guns.
I'll be blunt: If you know how to handle firearms then you'd know not to be concerned about empty shell casings. I can only conclude that you know as much about firearms whatever you've heard on NBC News.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.