Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
Full circle indeed. Sigh....
That said, it probably is needed since common sense isn't common anymore.
That said, it probably is needed since common sense isn't common anymore.
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
100% sir.Charles L. Cotton wrote:Anyone who would discipline a kid for "offenses" coming within the scope of the Bill should be fired and lose their teaching credentials. I'd like a little jail time thrown in too, but some would say I'm going overboard.Dave2 wrote:What's the penalty for attempting to punish a kid for chewing their food into a gun-like shape? I've become increasingly convinced that we won't actually solve the problem until we stop employing the problem people.
Chas.
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
We can thank overly vague "zero tolerance" policies and school administrators that refuse to use common sense for the need for such things as the "pop tart" bill. In our high school about 2 years ago, a student was arrested on a felony firearms charge. He was expelled and held without bail for several months in jail. Oh by the way, his weapon was a Sharpie. He drew a picture of a gun on the bathroom wall. The grand jury no billed him and he was released from jail. In the meantime, he spent several months in a place where he did not belong.
Since he was a senior, he did not get to graduate from high school. I think I heard he had to go get a GED.
He should have used something less lethal like a "dry erase" marker. Nevertheless, the school should have made him repaint the wall that he defaced and that would have taught him a lesson.
Since he was a senior, he did not get to graduate from high school. I think I heard he had to go get a GED.
He should have used something less lethal like a "dry erase" marker. Nevertheless, the school should have made him repaint the wall that he defaced and that would have taught him a lesson.
Annoy a Liberal, GET A JOB!
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
You have got to be kidding me...OneGun wrote:We can thank overly vague "zero tolerance" policies and school administrators that refuse to use common sense for the need for such things as the "pop tart" bill. In our high school about 2 years ago, a student was arrested on a felony firearms charge. He was expelled and held without bail for several months in jail. Oh by the way, his weapon was a Sharpie. He drew a picture of a gun on the bathroom wall. The grand jury no billed him and he was released from jail. In the meantime, he spent several months in a place where he did not belong.
Since he was a senior, he did not get to graduate from high school. I think I heard he had to go get a GED.
He should have used something less lethal like a "dry erase" marker. Nevertheless, the school should have made him repaint the wall that he defaced and that would have taught him a lesson.
I am not a lawyer, nor have I played one on TV, nor did I stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night, nor should anything I say be taken as legal advice. If it is important that any information be accurate, do not use me as the only source.
Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
Wait till you have a kid that needs medicine at school. It's just as ridiculous.Dave2 wrote: You have got to be kidding me...
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
At the MOST it shouldn't have been more than a vandalism charge. How it could be a felony firearms charge when there was no firearm involved blows my mind. Sheer insanity.OneGun wrote:We can thank overly vague "zero tolerance" policies and school administrators that refuse to use common sense for the need for such things as the "pop tart" bill. In our high school about 2 years ago, a student was arrested on a felony firearms charge. He was expelled and held without bail for several months in jail. Oh by the way, his weapon was a Sharpie. He drew a picture of a gun on the bathroom wall. The grand jury no billed him and he was released from jail. In the meantime, he spent several months in a place where he did not belong.
Since he was a senior, he did not get to graduate from high school. I think I heard he had to go get a GED.
He should have used something less lethal like a "dry erase" marker. Nevertheless, the school should have made him repaint the wall that he defaced and that would have taught him a lesson.
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
A friend of mine in school once passed out in the bathroom because she didn't have her asthma inhaler. We were in high school, and it was all the way across the building locked up in the nurse's office. I had to crawl under the stall door to unlock it so I could get her out of the bathroom and get her help. Seems to me by the time you're in high school and your asthma is well documented and proven to be severe enough that you're exempt from all PE requirements, you have an elevator key in case a bad attack leaves you too weak for the stairs, and you're likely to pass out if you don't get your inhaler promptly when needed, maybe you should be allowed to keep the thing in your backpack instead of locked up in an office across campus. Maybe she should have chewed a pop tart into the shape of an inhaler -- after all, if pop-tart guns are dangerous, maybe pop-tart inhalers are effective too?FigNewton wrote:Wait till you have a kid that needs medicine at school. It's just as ridiculous.Dave2 wrote: You have got to be kidding me...
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
Some school administrators are nutty.
I 'm just an Ole Sinner saved by Grace and Smith & Wesson.
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
I'm mean and unreasonable and intolerant. If that happened to one of my two daughters I'd be so into the district attorney's face to file attempted murder charges on more than one idiot at that school. I'd be a nightmare to the school board to have them fired as well. Then again, they'd probably only get one day of locking it up out of her reach before they knew that was a totally unwise decision.
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A pistol without a round chambered is an expensive paper weight.
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A pistol without a round chambered is an expensive paper weight.
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
The HS I work at allows students to carry inhalers and Eppi-pens with a Dr' s order on file. But as teachers we are banned from giving any meds except the Eppi- pen.
I 'm just an Ole Sinner saved by Grace and Smith & Wesson.
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Re: Texas lawmaker files 'Pop Tart gun' bill
LDB415 wrote:I'm mean and unreasonable and intolerant. If that happened to one of my two daughters I'd be so into the district attorney's face to file attempted murder charges on more than one idiot at that school. I'd be a nightmare to the school board to have them fired as well. Then again, they'd probably only get one day of locking it up out of her reach before they knew that was a totally unwise decision.
The problem is that school administrators may not have had a choice under current policy. And the DA didn't make that policy.
IF the DA chose to prosecute, I'd be with you, but the expulsion is often punishment enough.
These rules that are created such as mandatory minimums and zero-tolerance sure sound good at the time, but the implementation is lacking.