13 year old lobbies Congress to pass anti seclusion laws
Prometheus18 wrote:
No analogy is perfect, but it's reasonably accurate. There's no mention of a lock in the original article, anyway. Basically, what we're taking about here is a run-of-the-mill detention room. I hardly see what's wrong with that.
If you mean "detention room" as in prison cell, then yeah. It was described as being no bigger than a small closet, with no windows and no supervision (so not at all like school detention, which at my high school was a spare classroom with a teacher/administrator sitting at the front of the room supervising making sure students stayed for their entire detention period and giving them a hall pass if they needed to use the restroom, rather than just locking the door to ensure they stayed.)
That you don't see what is wrong with doing this to children is disturbing.
karathraceandherspecialdestiny wrote:
Prometheus18 wrote:
No analogy is perfect, but it's reasonably accurate. There's no mention of a lock in the original article, anyway. Basically, what we're taking about here is a run-of-the-mill detention room. I hardly see what's wrong with that.
If you mean "detention room" as in prison cell, then yeah. It was described as being no bigger than a small closet, with no windows and no supervision (so not at all like school detention, which at my high school was a spare classroom with a teacher/administrator sitting at the front of the room supervising making sure students stayed for their entire detention period and giving them a hall pass if they needed to use the restroom, rather than just locking the door to ensure they stayed.)
That you don't see what is wrong with doing this to children is disturbing.
The attached article indicates that it was a (former) storage closet with a window. No mention of lock. I don’t like that there was no one there when he called out. There’s no mention of any sort of safety monitoring.
Similar Topics | |
---|---|
Connecticut's Congress members targeted with bomb threats |
28 Nov 2024, 3:35 pm |
oh no, breaking federal laws like we did with weed. |
11 Dec 2024, 12:40 am |
This Year |
06 Nov 2024, 8:24 pm |
New Year’s Resolutions |
04 Jan 2025, 2:19 pm |