Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait.. Jawando lives in Bethesda, sends his kids to private school, but he thinks he knows what's best for a large public? GTFO.
I think he moved out to Olney or further out but his kids are in private school. He lives a very comfortable life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait.. Jawando lives in Bethesda, sends his kids to private school, but he thinks he knows what's best for a large public? GTFO.
I think he moved out to Olney or further out but his kids are in private school. He lives a very comfortable life.
Anonymous wrote:Wait.. Jawando lives in Bethesda, sends his kids to private school, but he thinks he knows what's best for a large public? GTFO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elrich, Jawando, the board and McKnight need to be given the boot. Actually include Hogan on the list too
I mean okay but please, Jawando first. It’s enough that this MAY have been avoided with SRO in the school. Hope he has trouble sleeping at night after this (and sending his kids to private school in the morning.) Shame on the voters of this county for electing him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know where or how severely the student was shot? Hoping for speedy and full recovery
It was severe, in the bathroom, child had major surgery last night and is recovering.
Sadly, WTOP is reporting the student's condition is worsening and he is fighting for his life. Thoughts and prayers are with him and his family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know where or how severely the student was shot? Hoping for speedy and full recovery
It was severe, in the bathroom, child had major surgery last night and is recovering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Obviously we're on our way to reinstatement of SROs in schools, and thank goodness for that. I'll never understand people who wanted to defund police, etc. I'm all for left-wing policies, but only when they actually make sense. If you want to address racism in law enforcement, you make make police academies MORE selective, and you lure in smarter candidates with more attractive pay (same method if you want to increase teaching standards).The dumb people will never react well in crisis situations regardless of the training they get! You can't staff such positions with the poorly-paid and the ones without critical thinking skills, and then act surprised that they're incompetent.
Good luck achieving this with the police academies in the hands of the existing police force.
+1 To keep this close to home, look at the caes of the officers caught on camera abusing a 5 year-old child inside an MCPS school last year. No accountability. No repercussions. Nothing but a blue wall protecting bad cops from ever seeing their actions have consequences.
As long as the entire structure of policing continues to protect abusive cops, none of the changes listed above will ever happen. Except giving them more money, because rewarding abusive cops is the American Way (tm).
MCPD is filled with very good officers. It’s a strong police department. Yes, those two officers were in the wrong. Guess what? A lot of MCPD agrees. Instead of falling back on old arguments, I recommend you get to know current policing. Fortunately, there are a couple avenues through which you can do that. Request a ride-along. Attend the citizens’ academy. Instead of falling back on preconceived notions, get to know the department. They are out in the community and sponsor regular events.
There are good and bad employees in any workplace. I would say the good outweigh the bad in MCPD. SROs are the best of the best. Our SRO had been in our school for over a decade. She interacted with students to give them a smile. She knew students by name - not because they were in trouble but because she would take more time than the principal to have conversations with the students.
Yeah. I don’t want my kid interacting with police unless it is mandatory. I can see that you don’t understand it. You might reflect on the fact that your refusal to understand it is part of why there are no SROs in schools now.
I don't want my kid to interact with shooters in school.
Right, it comes down to whether kids can form a positive relationship with one SRO who is kid-friendly to begin with, or have their schools flooded with hundreds of SWAT like police with long guns searching for their fellow perpetrator student.
PREVENTION IS SO MUCH BETTER.
I don’t accept these as our only two options.
What? You don’t accept prevention as an option? What could be preferaable to prevention ?
I can’t tell whether you are actually not too bright or whether you are just so hell-bent on arguing for the presence of police in schools that you can’t see any other alternatives.
I do not accept that school just as it is now, plus or minus SROs, are our only options for prevention.
Go away troll.
Violence has risen since SROs were removed. Alexandria has reinstated them. PG kept them. Putting them back removes one more variable re the increase in school violence. An SRO would have been much more likely to handle the situation on Friday appropriately.
Ha! I kind of wish I were trolling. Maybe you are, and the modal opinion in my kid’s community isn’t as boot-licking as you make it sound.
Anonymous wrote:Elrich, Jawando, the board and McKnight need to be given the boot. Actually include Hogan on the list too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Obviously we're on our way to reinstatement of SROs in schools, and thank goodness for that. I'll never understand people who wanted to defund police, etc. I'm all for left-wing policies, but only when they actually make sense. If you want to address racism in law enforcement, you make make police academies MORE selective, and you lure in smarter candidates with more attractive pay (same method if you want to increase teaching standards).The dumb people will never react well in crisis situations regardless of the training they get! You can't staff such positions with the poorly-paid and the ones without critical thinking skills, and then act surprised that they're incompetent.
Good luck achieving this with the police academies in the hands of the existing police force.
+1 To keep this close to home, look at the caes of the officers caught on camera abusing a 5 year-old child inside an MCPS school last year. No accountability. No repercussions. Nothing but a blue wall protecting bad cops from ever seeing their actions have consequences.
As long as the entire structure of policing continues to protect abusive cops, none of the changes listed above will ever happen. Except giving them more money, because rewarding abusive cops is the American Way (tm).
MCPD is filled with very good officers. It’s a strong police department. Yes, those two officers were in the wrong. Guess what? A lot of MCPD agrees. Instead of falling back on old arguments, I recommend you get to know current policing. Fortunately, there are a couple avenues through which you can do that. Request a ride-along. Attend the citizens’ academy. Instead of falling back on preconceived notions, get to know the department. They are out in the community and sponsor regular events.
There are good and bad employees in any workplace. I would say the good outweigh the bad in MCPD. SROs are the best of the best. Our SRO had been in our school for over a decade. She interacted with students to give them a smile. She knew students by name - not because they were in trouble but because she would take more time than the principal to have conversations with the students.
Yeah. I don’t want my kid interacting with police unless it is mandatory. I can see that you don’t understand it. You might reflect on the fact that your refusal to understand it is part of why there are no SROs in schools now.
I don't want my kid to interact with shooters in school.
Right, it comes down to whether kids can form a positive relationship with one SRO who is kid-friendly to begin with, or have their schools flooded with hundreds of SWAT like police with long guns searching for their fellow perpetrator student.
PREVENTION IS SO MUCH BETTER.
I don’t accept these as our only two options.
What? You don’t accept prevention as an option? What could be preferaable to prevention ?
I can’t tell whether you are actually not too bright or whether you are just so hell-bent on arguing for the presence of police in schools that you can’t see any other alternatives.
I do not accept that school just as it is now, plus or minus SROs, are our only options for prevention.
Go away troll.
Violence has risen since SROs were removed. Alexandria has reinstated them. PG kept them. Putting them back removes one more variable re the increase in school violence. An SRO would have been much more likely to handle the situation on Friday appropriately.