Clementine
Platinum Member
- Dec 18, 2011
- 12,919
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Holy crap!! This school has called police about 5 times a day for the last month for shit like this. The administrators told teachers to call 911 over name calling or any little thing. So, at an end of the year party, students were given treats. One boy apparently didn't know the name of one treat and commented that he didn't like the brown things, meaning brownies. I guess these teachers never heard students refer to brussel sprouts as green things or peppers as red things. Kids don't always know what things are called and often describe them. The boy was referring to the brownies because he didn't care for them. Of course, in this age of race baiting morons, even the most innocent remark is viewed through the lens of racism. Instead of the teacher just telling the little boy what the treats were called, she fucking called police.
I am betting that these nut jobs will want the family to undergo some kind of sensitivity training or attend a re-education camp. Sanity no longer rules in this country.
"Third-grader's innocent comment on baked goods triggers 911 call"
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/06/29/third-graders-innocent-comment-on-baked-goods-triggers-911-call.html?intcmp=hppop
"The police were called to a New Jersey elementary school after a 9-year-old boy made a disparaging comment about the brownies he was eating at an end-of-the-year class party. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer another student interpreted the remarks as racist and instead of just punishing the offender with detention, or calling his parents, or just explaining what he did wrong (if anything at all), the school turned to law enforcement. The cops didn’t press charges but still reported the incident to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection.
The boy’s mother told the Inquirer that her son had made the "brownie" comment about the baked goods, not skin color. Officers ended up visiting the school and speaking to her son.
This is not an isolated incident in the school district. The police were called about five times a day in the past month for a district of 1,875 students.
Apparently the directive to call the police over even minor incidents comes from the top down. In a meeting in May, the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office directed school officials and police to involve law enforcement in issues "as minor as a simple name-calling incident that the school would typically handle internally." They were also told to report "just about every incident" to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection.
Parents in the district are understandably pissed and have been lobbying the mayor to end this ridiculously wasteful over-policing. Other parents want to change schools, having lost faith in the school’s administrators."
http://heatst.com/culture-wars/cops-called-on-third-grader-for-racist-brownie-remark/
I am betting that these nut jobs will want the family to undergo some kind of sensitivity training or attend a re-education camp. Sanity no longer rules in this country.
"Third-grader's innocent comment on baked goods triggers 911 call"
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/06/29/third-graders-innocent-comment-on-baked-goods-triggers-911-call.html?intcmp=hppop
"The police were called to a New Jersey elementary school after a 9-year-old boy made a disparaging comment about the brownies he was eating at an end-of-the-year class party. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer another student interpreted the remarks as racist and instead of just punishing the offender with detention, or calling his parents, or just explaining what he did wrong (if anything at all), the school turned to law enforcement. The cops didn’t press charges but still reported the incident to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection.
The boy’s mother told the Inquirer that her son had made the "brownie" comment about the baked goods, not skin color. Officers ended up visiting the school and speaking to her son.
This is not an isolated incident in the school district. The police were called about five times a day in the past month for a district of 1,875 students.
Apparently the directive to call the police over even minor incidents comes from the top down. In a meeting in May, the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office directed school officials and police to involve law enforcement in issues "as minor as a simple name-calling incident that the school would typically handle internally." They were also told to report "just about every incident" to the New Jersey Division of Child Protection.
Parents in the district are understandably pissed and have been lobbying the mayor to end this ridiculously wasteful over-policing. Other parents want to change schools, having lost faith in the school’s administrators."
http://heatst.com/culture-wars/cops-called-on-third-grader-for-racist-brownie-remark/