crimresearch
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- Jan 20, 2004
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Aren't corporal punishment, and putting hands onto a violent child really two entirely different issues?
davefoc said:I asked my 13 year old daughter about this and she gave what I thought was a very thoughtful answer.
davefoc said:I asked my 13 year old daughter about this and she gave what I thought was a very thoughtful answer.
She felt that the kid should have been directed out to the playground to burn off a little steam.
crimresearch said:> Why would they leave a violent child in the classroom with scissors, windows, and other children? And as repeatedly pointed out, overcrowded US school do not always have these convenient 'Time Out' rooms down every hallway.
Granted, still seems a poor choice, though. If there really was no better room the child should have ben confined to one corner - which leads to the second point -
> According to the reports, there were other adults working with her.
Perhaps, but they weren't helping much in the video clip
> As mentioned, the avoidance is usually the result of politiains making it a policy requirement to call the police for things that would have been handled inside the schol a few decades ago.
No doubt - we have the same sort of problem in the UK with the fear of litigation etc. It is still IMO often an abrogation of responsibility by the education authorities
> I'd need to see some evidence on that. Why is the mother talking about lawsuits, if the child was cuffed pursuant to her request?
Listen to what he says just before cuffing her - I'm not sure if was he talking about responding to a request from the mother or warning her what would happen
> As already pointed out, US police do not use cuffs only when they are necessary...they are legitimatley authorized, and in fact, often required by policy to use them as a precaution, *before* it becomes a matter of neccessity. Legally, their use doesn't even constitute an arrest under the right circumstances.
Understood. We can use them without arrest too, but not, I think, in these particular circumstances
> Modern equipment, such as the cuffs used by those officers, is widely distributed in the US
As it is in the UK. Rigid cuffs are the norm, of the same pattern that is, I believe, standard in the US.
Link
Zep said:Smart girl, your daughter, davefoc.
clk said:Still no evidence from CFLarsen.....
Rather amazing, isn't it? CFLarsen throws out some pretty hefty accusations, but doesn't have the guts to back them up with evidence.
Or perhaps the evidence is simply not there.
If larsen provides the evidence I'm going to go out and buy a lottery ticket.TragicMonkey said:What was the "definite physical harm" that the little girl took from being handcuffed?
If larsen provides the evidence I'm going to go out and buy a lottery ticket.