Yeah. Don't to that its not there fault there retarded.Ivan Daylovich wrote:Nasty, stop making fun of the mentally handicapped. It's not cool.
Yeah. Don't to that its not there fault there retarded.Ivan Daylovich wrote:Nasty, stop making fun of the mentally handicapped. It's not cool.
rbm33 wrote:Evil Zergling137 wrote:
Any damage or long term costs are the fault of the person who decided to escalate the situation by calling them.
This is a foolish statement.
So, on halloween, yes, the faculty should have realized some dumbass would show up with a toy gun for a costume. But on all other days, they really have to go balls to the walls with reaction, because the 1 of 1000 times they don't, they will either be sued by a parent group, loose their jobs, or it will be a real gun.
What your saying is, if i see a gun at school at call the cops, i should pay the fines, bail, lawyer fees, ect? Not the idiot who brought the gun?
Honestly, in todays day every little shit should know that a gun, be it nerf, airsoft, paintball or noise maker is not allowed at school, period.
Even things having to do with guns is not allowed, my 8 yr old son had a pocket full of EMPTY spent .22 shells and forgot they were in his coat when he went to school on the next monday, i was called to pick him up because of it. I promptly told the principle that he over reacted and was an idiot for it. But i can see why they have zero tolerance.
Evil Zergling137 wrote:Matt wrote:I sort of agree with him and I sort of don't - depends on the situation. If somebody claims a student has a "gun" - and as a school principle you do not know if it's real or not, you really don't have many options but to get law enforcement involved. In fact, it's probably required. However, if somebody said "Little Billy brought an AIRSOFT gun to school today..." well in that case, I'd just bring him into the office and dig a confession out of him, then have his parents pick him AND the Airsoft gun up... hand out a suspension and tell him never to bring it again.
Yeah that would be the correct way to handle it. Also if someone were to bring a real (loaded) firearm into a classroom as a student (and showing it off) then it would be reasonable to conclude that there was an intent to use (or likelihood of using) that firearm so bringing police into the situation would be reasonable. It would not be (much of) an escalation.
I do disagree that you can't tell the difference. People know what is going on and you should be able to profile pretty easily the small portion of the class that could actually bring real loaded firearms in a way that could actually result in the use of them.
Jester316 wrote:Evil Zergling137 wrote:Matt wrote:I sort of agree with him and I sort of don't - depends on the situation. If somebody claims a student has a "gun" - and as a school principle you do not know if it's real or not, you really don't have many options but to get law enforcement involved. In fact, it's probably required. However, if somebody said "Little Billy brought an AIRSOFT gun to school today..." well in that case, I'd just bring him into the office and dig a confession out of him, then have his parents pick him AND the Airsoft gun up... hand out a suspension and tell him never to bring it again.
Yeah that would be the correct way to handle it. Also if someone were to bring a real (loaded) firearm into a classroom as a student (and showing it off) then it would be reasonable to conclude that there was an intent to use (or likelihood of using) that firearm so bringing police into the situation would be reasonable. It would not be (much of) an escalation.
I do disagree that you can't tell the difference. People know what is going on and you should be able to profile pretty easily the small portion of the class that could actually bring real loaded firearms in a way that could actually result in the use of them.
Profiling will result in a multi-million dollar lawsuit.
Jester316 wrote:Evil Zergling137 wrote:Matt wrote:Something smart
I do disagree that you can't tell the difference. People know what is going on and you should be able to profile pretty easily the small portion of the class that could actually bring real loaded firearms in a way that could actually result in the use of them.
Profiling will result in a multi-million dollar lawsuit.
Switchback wrote:Don't do shady deals in the classifieds before you have someones hand print on one of your butt cheeks.
Snowman wrote:How old are you, really? Because I doubt you're actually 27, at this point...
rbm33 wrote:Snowman wrote:How old are you, really? Because I doubt you're actually 27, at this point...
+1
I was actually thinking that same thing when i read the comments.
Nasty wrote:Ivan Daylovich wrote:Nasty, stop making fun of the mentally handicapped. It's not cool.
I can't help it. This guy makes Michele Bachmann look like f***ing Einstein.
Nasty wrote:
Because arguing with idiots is generally counterproductive and a waste of time, which is why we're not bother to counter you excellent belief that you should never call the cops, especially when someone brings what could be a firearm to school.
Idiotic parents wrote: What's that Billy you want to bring a gun to school okay! Make sure to flash it around to everyone at school!!!!
Switchback wrote:Don't do shady deals in the classifieds before you have someones hand print on one of your butt cheeks.
Nasty wrote:Evil Zergling137 wrote:PS: I'm not seeing any counter arguments.
Because arguing with idiots is generally counterproductive and a waste of time, which is why we're not bother to counter you excellent belief that you should never call the cops, especially when someone brings what could be a firearm to school.
Mcluvin wrote:Just last week at my school( Oregon City High School), there was also a freshman who brought an airsoft gun to school. Some more responsible kids tipped off the faculty which was a good thing to do in my opinion. Why would someone decide to bring a replica to school? Do they want to become infamous and attract bad attention? People that do this need to get their sh*t straight.
Evil Zergling137 wrote:Matt wrote:I sort of agree with him and I sort of don't - depends on the situation. If somebody claims a student has a "gun" - and as a school principle you do not know if it's real or not, you really don't have many options but to get law enforcement involved. In fact, it's probably required. However, if somebody said "Little Billy brought an AIRSOFT gun to school today..." well in that case, I'd just bring him into the office and dig a confession out of him, then have his parents pick him AND the Airsoft gun up... hand out a suspension and tell him never to bring it again.
Yeah that would be the correct way to handle it. Also if someone were to bring a real (loaded) firearm into a classroom as a student (and showing it off) then it would be reasonable to conclude that there was an intent to use (or likelihood of using) that firearm so bringing police into the situation would be reasonable. It would not be (much of) an escalation.
I do disagree that you can't tell the difference. People know what is going on and you should be able to profile pretty easily the small portion of the class that could actually bring real loaded firearms in a way that could actually result in the use of them.
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