“Every day in communities across the United States,
children and adolescents spend the majority of their waking hours in
schools that have increasingly come to resemble places of detention more
than places of learning. From metal detectors to drug tests, from
increased policing to all-seeing electronic surveillance, the public schools of the twenty-first century reflect a society that has become fixated on crime, security and violence.”—Investigative journalist Annette Fuentes
In the American police state, you’re either a prisoner (shackled,
controlled, monitored, ordered about, limited in what you can do and
say, your life not your own) or a prison bureaucrat (police officer,
judge, jailer, spy, profiteer, etc.).
Indeed, at a time when we are all viewed as suspects, there are so
many ways in which a person can be branded a criminal for violating any
number of laws, regulations or policies. Even if you haven’t knowingly
violated any laws, there is still a myriad of ways in which you can run
afoul of the police state and end up on the wrong side of a jail cell.
Unfortunately, when you’re a child in the American police state, life is that much worse.
Microcosms of the police state, America’s public schools contain
almost every aspect of the militarized, intolerant, senseless,
overcriminalized, legalistic, surveillance-riddled, totalitarian
landscape that plagues those of us on the “outside.”
From the moment a child enters one of the nation’s 98,000 public schools to
the moment she graduates, she will be exposed to a steady diet of
draconian zero tolerance policies that criminalize childish behavior,
overreaching anti-bullying statutes that criminalize speech, school
resource officers (police) tasked with disciplining and/or arresting
so-called “disorderly” students, standardized testing that emphasizes
rote answers over critical thinking, politically correct mindsets that
teach young people to censor themselves and those around them, and
extensive biometric and surveillance systems that, coupled with the
rest, acclimate young people to a world in which they have no freedom of
thought, speech or movement.
If your child is fortunate enough to survive his encounter with the public schools, you should count yourself fortunate.
Most students are not so lucky.
READ MORE:http://www.blacklistednews.com/Public_School_Students_Are_The_New_Inmates_In_The_American_Police_State/46186/0/38/38/Y/M.html
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