kegmcnabb wrote:Well Joe, I appreciate your weighing in on this. It was a question I posed and your thoughtful answer is appreciated.
I do wonder about a couple of things, however.
Joe Baker wrote:
I went to an inner-city Jr. High back in the early days of bussing ('74-'76)...
...And just like at the airport, the good kid who has never caused anyone a minute of trouble is subject to the same suspicion and the same treatment as the punk.
Given the years you were in school you are probably old enough to remember the rash of airline hijackings that led to the intitial rise of security in airports. Sure, it inconvenienced people then too, and some people complained, but you know what...IT WORKED...for nearly 30 years anyway.
Secondly, who is the good kid getting incovenienced? The very definition of RANDOM checks mandate that they include the possiblility that anyone COULD be a problem. If you remember, before 9/11, the faces of the biggest terrorist killers on US soil probably looked a lot like you or me...a tall skinny white man and a short, balding middle age white guy. Neither looking particularly terrorist-like...whatever the flip that is. Exactly how do we go about indentifying the "punk" who deserves this inconvenience? I guess if we knew HOW to do that, we would have no safety issues in the skies or on school playgrounds.
Is some of this "safety" an illusion? Probably, but again it represents an honest attempt to work out these issues. This situation is new to all of us and will require a learning curve to get it right. I think most of us can live with that if we try.
Apolgies to those who must maintain their precious manicures.
Kevin, forgive me if any of this sounds like I'm mad at you. I'm not, but this whole issue just hits my hot-button. I really do apologize if I've given -- or am about to give

-- any sign that I'm angry with you in any way.
I'm not opposed to real security measures. I definitely want airlines to be checking for weapons and explosives. I like the idea of an armed presence in the airports, too. I got pulled off a plane in Frankfort at gunpoint once, because my voltage converter aroused suspicions when it was X-rayed, and as scary and embarrassing as that was (imagine the looks from the other passengers on the four-hour flight when I came back on the plane), I'm all for REAL strict security. It's the phony stuff -- things that I don't think ARE an honest attempt to work out issues, merely to avoid admitting that this is a dangerous world that can't be made completely safe -- that irks me. I, an American citizen with no arrest record or foreign affiliation, get grilled like a sirloin steak coming into the country -- and that's okay. But at the same time, we have border patrols in the southwest being told to look the other way when who-knows-WHO is strolling across the border! Where's the security in THAT??
I agree with your point that in the public at large you do have to go with a lot of the random stuff (although common sense dictates that -- while most young Arab men are no threat -- a young man from Syria SHOULD be checked a bit more closely than an 80-year-old woman from Scottsdale).
But in the school, the staff knows within a week who is trouble. Ask any teacher if I'm not right. In the past (for example in my Jr. High years) the teachers knew who was starting the fights and who was being attacked, and responded accordingly. As long as all I did was defend myself, I never got into trouble. Today, if a kid defends himself he's treated EXACTLY the same as the kid that started it -- as though the school staff doesn't really know which kid is the bully and which the innocent victim.

I had to pull my kid out to a private school for two years because he kept getting jumped by other kids, and he'd wind up with the same punishment as the kids that were jumping him. The Principal even told me, "Mr. Baker, I understand that it's upsetting that Johnny keeps hitting, kicking and shoving your son, but we just can't have fighting". Uh-huh. Apparently they
can have Johnny hitting and shoving my kid, though. Because all they ever did was tell Johnny to stop, which instruction he heeded for about 10 seconds before he was back on my kid.
With all the people out there claiming to be willing to do
anything "for the children", it's time somebody did SOMETHING to solve this problem -- and it has to start with separating the bad apples from the rest of the barrell.
_________________________
Joe Baker, who is fed up with phony-baloney.