I'm still dreaming.
Who are you to want to escape a thugs bullet? That is only a personal prejudice, ( Atlas Shrugged)
"Those that don't watch the old media are uninformed, those that do watch the old media are misinformed." - Mark Twain
So, one of the pro 2A kids from Parkland, who has spent lots of time defending the 2A, recently went to shoot an AR for the first time with his Dad. He posted about his range trip online in an attempt to continue his pro 2A arguments.
He was reported to the school and was taken out of class and questioned by not one, not two, but three Broward County deputies. Without a parent present. And in his opinion, in a very aggressive manner.
He posted about that too.
Then the Broward County SO released a deputy's incident report of the contact with the kid. And it is laughable. The deputy that wrote it misspelled RIFLE twice. Seriously. And, he mixed the kid's parents' names up in the report as well.
Questioning a kid without parents. Writing reports filled with spelling errors and false information. That department has a serious lack of professionalism.
https://www.dailywire.com/news/29891...ses-daily-wire
Oh yeah, the video has not been taken down either.On April 23, 2018 I was approached by the school security supervisor Mr. Greenleaf regarding a student that posted a video on social media of himself shooting a riffle. There were students concerned about the video.
The student was Kyle Kashuv w/m [birth date]. He was asked about the video and he stated the riffle [sic] was a friend of his [sic]. He stated he went shooting with his dad and he took a video and posted it on social media. He said he didn’t threaten anyone.
Kyle mother [name redacted] was contacted and she said she knew about the video and she confirmed Kyle statement about going with his dad to the gun range. She stated he’s a good kid and wouldn’t hurt anyone.
The video was taken down prior to the meeting.
Dumb.
"There are no finger prints under water."
The school assumes the role of guardian while the child is in school.
We had an issue, close to 30 ago with our daughter. To say they over stepped their bounds (le & school district) would be an understatement. However after consulting with more than 1 attorney i was told there were grounds to move forward.
BUT..... the school admin will say they were acting on what they "thought to be" the best interest of the child. LE will say they acted on school authority request.
The question we were asked was. How much would we like to spend to pursue the questionable violations that were present. LE apologized, the school admin didn't give 2 shits.
The teacher who started the ball rolling took some admin leave and never apologized. She was "acting on her feels" just 1 more reason those in the education system have done so well brain washing public school kids.
The Great Kazoo's Feedback
"when you're happy you enjoy the melody but, when you're broken you understand the lyrics".
That sucks Kazoo. I am no fan of public schools.
This pro 2A Parkland kid seems to be doing a good job tearing apart the school via the interwebs and supportive media. I don't think he intends to make it a legal fight. But who knows.
School district shuts down information after Parkland shootings
The Broward County, Fla., school district's repeated, emphatic - and it turns out, false - statements that Nikolas Cruz had not been in a controversial disciplinary program fit a pattern of an institution on the defense and under siege.
Facing significant legal and political exposure over the Feb. 14 shootings at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the district has tried to keep information from the public and put out untrue and misleading statements, frustrating parents who say this is the time for maximum transparency.
The district is fighting in court against the release of school surveillance video. It flatly refused to provide any records regarding the shooting to the news media, in a possible violation of the state's open-records law. Superintendent Robert Runcie has blocked critics, including parents, from his Twitter account. More than two months after the shooting, a Broward sheriff's detective told a state commission on school safety that he was still waiting for the district to provide all of Cruz's disciplinary records.
The worst came last week, when Runcie acknowledged that his forceful denials that Cruz had been involved in the Promise program, which is intended to provide an alternative to the arrest of students for minor offenses, were wrong.
"It would appear that the district is more interested in protecting their programs than they are the students and teachers in our schools," said Ryan Petty, whose 14-year-old daughter, Alaina, was killed by Cruz during his rampage through the school. "As a father, I would ask the district to please be completely transparent so we can make sure this doesn't happen to any other children in any other schools in Florida."
School district spokeswoman Tracy Clark said the district has provided accurate information to investigators, the press and the public as fast as possible and "any suggestion that the district is not being forthcoming is either based on a misunderstanding or misinformation."
"The district continues to focus on responding in a timely and accurate manner to the unprecedented number of public records requests, media requests and subpoenas related to the tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School," she said in an email. "In addition, we have coordinated numerous interviews with employees as part of the various ongoing investigations. Both the State Attorney's Office, through the Broward Sheriff's Office, and the Public Defender's Office have been given complete copies of the records related to Nikolas Cruz that have been gathered to date."
Andrew Pollack, whose daughter Meadow was killed in the shooting, said he was surprised to learn that the district still has not provided all of Cruz's records to investigators. At a meeting of the state commission set up after the shooting to improve school safety, Pollack asked a Broward sheriff's detective whether all of the records had been provided.
"I believe that some of the items we are seeking to get from the school board, we have received some," Detective Zachary Scott said. "But I do not believe we've received everything yet."
"It caught us all off guard," Pollack said in an interview last week. "We didn't believe it. It's past two months now already. A lot of the people on the committee couldn't believe it."
From the school district, Pollack said, "there's no honesty at all."
Liberals never met a slippery slope they didn't grease.
-Me
I wish technology solved people issues. It seems to just reveal them.
-Also Me