Biden’s Education Department moves to install racial quotas in school discipline policies.

Weatherman2020

Diamond Member
Mar 3, 2013
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Right coast, classified
This is actually all about abortion.

The children of crack/hard drug addicts disrupt classrooms. Crack addicts/whores should not be allowed to have kids.

They are overwhelmingly black.

Solution - punish white kids
 
You guy's want to point out the hysteria you are feeling from the actual proclamation from the president's statement?




I have often said that America’s young people are the kite strings that hold our national ambitions aloft — they carry the possibilities of our country and the sacred promise of a democracy where every one of us is treated equally and entitled to equal justice under the law. However, far too many of our young people are effectively excluded from participating in our democracy, having been sidelined by unnecessary encounters with the justice system. They deserve a second chance.

During National Youth Justice Action Month, I call upon States and communities to join me in seeking justice for our youth and modernizing our juvenile justice system, a system that should allow young people to build their lives and grow with freedom and dignity.

Long-standing inequities in our society — including in our juvenile and criminal justice systems — continue to disproportionately burden people of color and people with disabilities. Nationwide, Black youth are more than four times as likely as their white peers to be held in juvenile facilities, and they come into contact with both the juvenile justice and the child welfare systems at far higher rates. Additionally, one-third of young people in juvenile justice facilities have a disability, including many with emotional distress and learning disabilities. To deliver equal justice and equal dignity to all people, it is imperative that we root out racial inequities and other forms of discrimination from these systems.

Although youth arrests are at their lowest levels in decades, each arrest can create a ripple effect of heightened risks and negative consequences for young people. Once in the system, young people may face abusive treatment and dangerous conditions, including excessive use of restraint, guard-instigated fights, and sexual assault. Adverse environments and lack of support make it difficult for young people who enter the carceral system to lead healthy, productive lives upon exiting.

To give all of our young people a chance to live up to their full potential, we need to shift our approach from a default stance of incarceration to one of prevention — a strategy that recognizes that children’s developmental stages and needs are starkly different from those of adults. Addressing racial disparities in school discipline and supporting proven early intervention efforts like afterschool and mentoring programs are simple steps we can take to help all young people find a sense of purpose and contribute to their communities. Many States are making a greater effort to keep teenagers under the jurisdiction of juvenile courts, which take their developmental needs into account and are better equipped to support their rehabilitation than systems built for adults.

In my Fiscal Year 2022 budget, I proposed an $800 million investment to more than double our current funding for juvenile justice and youth reentry programs that protect children and help young people get the services they need to get back on their feet. This includes incentives for States and communities that introduce reforms to reduce youth incarceration — including repurposing juvenile detention facilities to focus more on youth development. It also includes resources to develop research-based solutions to steer kids away from detention and toward more positive alternatives. Through grants provided by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention at the Department of Justice, we are giving young people access to high-quality legal representation and resources to help them better manage the consequences of their contact with the system. We will ensure that young people in the juvenile justice system receive the counsel they are entitled to and will work to address the disproportionately high enforcement directed against young people of color.

Moreover, my Administration is working to ensure that all young people have the support they need to avoid entering the justice system in the first place. I have proposed $1 billion for a new School-Based Health Professionals grant program to help double the number of counselors, nurses, social workers, and other health professionals in our schools. In addition, I have proposed $443 million for Full-Service Community Schools, which would provide comprehensive wrap-around services to students and their families. Programs like these help ensure that more young people grow up in supportive environments and have what they need to reach their full potential.

 
This is actually all about abortion.

The children of crack/hard drug addicts disrupt classrooms. Crack addicts/whores should not be allowed to have kids.

They are overwhelmingly black.

Solution - punish white kids
Do you have something of a link to the president actually saying that?
 
Nothing says "racism" more than holding certain races to lower standards.

The KKK smiles.

Next up: Boys getting into more trouble than girls, so change the quotas!

Exhibit 54,634 on why you should never send your kids to public schools.

President Obama already told schools to stop suspending students for defiance.

It seems that most suspended students were members of two certain ethnicities. (No need to be specific.)

Of course, President Obama thought, those suspended students were being picked on.

The poor babies!
 
I do object to people calling minorities people of color since all people have a color of skin, no one is like see through or invisible.
 
yep, forever kkker demofks still kkking. Still treating blacks as inferior to them. fk, Hey Black folks, wake the fk up already.
 
I do object to people calling minorities people of color since all people have a color of skin, no one is like see through or invisible.
wow, one I agree with you on. way to go.

kkker demofks use the word to disassociate themselves from black people. See to a demofk, a black person is far inferior to them. So much so, they have to tell them how inferior they really are often, like here.
 
President Obama already told schools to stop suspending students for defiance.

It seems that most suspended students were members of two certain ethnicities. (No need to be specific.)

Of course, President Obama thought, those suspended students were being picked on.

The poor babies!
Yep, nothing says great education for your kid like having a disruptive teen screaming in the classroom all day.
 
I don't work for the public school system nor have I ever had a male child molested because I am not Catholic nor did I send my kids to church to be molested. Next stupid question?
You're a fool if you think pedos only hang out in churches

Child molestation in schools is epidemic
 
Nothing says "racism" more than holding certain races to lower standards.

The KKK smiles.

Next up: Boys getting into more trouble than girls, so change the quotas!

Exhibit 54,634 on why you should never send your kids to public schools.

And another example of how liberal solutions make the problems worse. They find an outcome they can peg a problem to that always involves more government. They never identify the actual problem and almost always make things worse. From that article, here is some rational commentary -
Education experts Hans von Spakovsky and Jonathan Butcher have criticized the department’s focus on disparate impact. In a report for the Heritage Foundation, von Spakovsky and Butcher lambasted the strategy as “unlawful and unwise,” asserting that a focus on race “endangers students and teachers” by creating discriminatory practices in the classroom.

Hans Bader, attorney and former senior counsel at the Center for Individual Rights, said that racial disparities in student discipline are rooted in actual rates of student misbehavior, not discrimination on the part of administrators.

“The differences are real,” Bader told The College Fix. “They persist all over the country, and there is no suspicious pattern to them.”

That is the problem. The consistently disproportionately bad behavior. As a country there is absolutely no straight talk about this problem while we let these morons create harmful policies based on bogus premises.
 
I got an idea.

How about kids that break school rules are punished accordingly.

Kids that obey the rules are left alone.

And all kids are taught "don't want to get in trouble? Don't break the laws" kind of like we're supposed to be doing with adults in this country.
 
And another example of how liberal solutions make the problems worse. They find an outcome they can peg a problem to that always involves more government. They never identify the actual problem and almost always make things worse. From that article, here is some rational commentary -

That is the problem. The consistently disproportionately bad behavior. As a country there is absolutely no straight talk about this problem while we let these morons create harmful policies based on bogus premises.



Liberalism: where denial and delusion are inserted between fact and conclusion.



Every liberal gets up in the morning saying "The answer is bigger government. Now....what is your question."
 
You guy's want to point out the hysteria you are feeling from the actual proclamation from the president's statement?




I have often said that America’s young people are the kite strings that hold our national ambitions aloft — they carry the possibilities of our country and the sacred promise of a democracy where every one of us is treated equally and entitled to equal justice under the law. However, far too many of our young people are effectively excluded from participating in our democracy, having been sidelined by unnecessary encounters with the justice system. They deserve a second chance.

During National Youth Justice Action Month, I call upon States and communities to join me in seeking justice for our youth and modernizing our juvenile justice system, a system that should allow young people to build their lives and grow with freedom and dignity.

Long-standing inequities in our society — including in our juvenile and criminal justice systems — continue to disproportionately burden people of color and people with disabilities. Nationwide, Black youth are more than four times as likely as their white peers to be held in juvenile facilities, and they come into contact with both the juvenile justice and the child welfare systems at far higher rates. Additionally, one-third of young people in juvenile justice facilities have a disability, including many with emotional distress and learning disabilities. To deliver equal justice and equal dignity to all people, it is imperative that we root out racial inequities and other forms of discrimination from these systems.

Although youth arrests are at their lowest levels in decades, each arrest can create a ripple effect of heightened risks and negative consequences for young people. Once in the system, young people may face abusive treatment and dangerous conditions, including excessive use of restraint, guard-instigated fights, and sexual assault. Adverse environments and lack of support make it difficult for young people who enter the carceral system to lead healthy, productive lives upon exiting.

To give all of our young people a chance to live up to their full potential, we need to shift our approach from a default stance of incarceration to one of prevention — a strategy that recognizes that children’s developmental stages and needs are starkly different from those of adults. Addressing racial disparities in school discipline and supporting proven early intervention efforts like afterschool and mentoring programs are simple steps we can take to help all young people find a sense of purpose and contribute to their communities. Many States are making a greater effort to keep teenagers under the jurisdiction of juvenile courts, which take their developmental needs into account and are better equipped to support their rehabilitation than systems built for adults.

In my Fiscal Year 2022 budget, I proposed an $800 million investment to more than double our current funding for juvenile justice and youth reentry programs that protect children and help young people get the services they need to get back on their feet. This includes incentives for States and communities that introduce reforms to reduce youth incarceration — including repurposing juvenile detention facilities to focus more on youth development. It also includes resources to develop research-based solutions to steer kids away from detention and toward more positive alternatives. Through grants provided by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention at the Department of Justice, we are giving young people access to high-quality legal representation and resources to help them better manage the consequences of their contact with the system. We will ensure that young people in the juvenile justice system receive the counsel they are entitled to and will work to address the disproportionately high enforcement directed against young people of color.

Moreover, my Administration is working to ensure that all young people have the support they need to avoid entering the justice system in the first place. I have proposed $1 billion for a new School-Based Health Professionals grant program to help double the number of counselors, nurses, social workers, and other health professionals in our schools. In addition, I have proposed $443 million for Full-Service Community Schools, which would provide comprehensive wrap-around services to students and their families. Programs like these help ensure that more young people grow up in supportive environments and have what they need to reach their full potential.

School choice. Why are you against that?
 

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