Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That brings us to...three? four? stabbings on MCPS property since the start of school.
Any attempt to lay this at the feet of a certain school is misguided, as we're seeing these incidents all over the county. But it does force a question of what to do about it.
Unlike PP, I don't think that the renaming of SROs is the problem here. We are living in difficult times, and times that have been particularly hard on young people. As a society, we've not done much to care for them, emotionally, during this period.
I think we're seeing the impact now from pretending that everything was normal, that they could just pick up where they left off at school, even when kids lost parents, or parents lost their jobs, or kids lost the ties of friendship that had kept them sane.
Let's stop lobbing rhetorical bombs about Blair vs Whitman stabbings and which one is more typical and start thinking about what we can do for our young people, across the county, to mitigate the causes of this violence.
Yes to the last few paragraphs! Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cept we didn’t. They just changed names. Pay attention.Anonymous wrote:Good thing we got rid of SROs!
https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2021/08/montgomery-co-schools-wont-have-school-resource-officers-when-students-return/
Sure looks like there are no more officers on school grounds to me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone should be focusing on the county's inability to keep our students safe - regardless of which school they attend. I put the blame on the County Council and they need to come up with a solution now.
You put the blame on the County Council, why?
Because they removed the SROs (after full disapproval from ALL MCPS high school principals) and promised a whole bunch of mental health advisors and social workers to replace them. Only the first half has happened. Yes, they are to be blamed.
Anonymous wrote:That brings us to...three? four? stabbings on MCPS property since the start of school.
Any attempt to lay this at the feet of a certain school is misguided, as we're seeing these incidents all over the county. But it does force a question of what to do about it.
Unlike PP, I don't think that the renaming of SROs is the problem here. We are living in difficult times, and times that have been particularly hard on young people. As a society, we've not done much to care for them, emotionally, during this period.
I think we're seeing the impact now from pretending that everything was normal, that they could just pick up where they left off at school, even when kids lost parents, or parents lost their jobs, or kids lost the ties of friendship that had kept them sane.
Let's stop lobbing rhetorical bombs about Blair vs Whitman stabbings and which one is more typical and start thinking about what we can do for our young people, across the county, to mitigate the causes of this violence.
Anonymous wrote:Does mcps tells its students that they should respect each other and be civil? Do the students know what is right and what is wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone should be focusing on the county's inability to keep our students safe - regardless of which school they attend. I put the blame on the County Council and they need to come up with a solution now.
You put the blame on the County Council, why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cept we didn’t. They just changed names. Pay attention.Anonymous wrote:Good thing we got rid of SROs!
https://wtop.com/montgomery-county/2021/08/montgomery-co-schools-wont-have-school-resource-officers-when-students-return/
Sure looks like there are no more officers on school grounds to me!
Read your own article.
"The school system said the position will be replaced by Community Engagement Officers, which will consist of police officers who patrol in areas around schools, but will not be in direct contact with school staff."
Sound like a useful position to handle an incident outside in the parking lot, or in a nearby neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone should be focusing on the county's inability to keep our students safe - regardless of which school they attend. I put the blame on the County Council and they need to come up with a solution now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1P UPDATE: just watched @mcpnews
walk a young male in handcuffs out of Blair HS. Reached out to @MCPS
to confirm this is the stabbing suspect.
@fox5dc
https://twitter.com/RamirezReports/status/1457771001173856262
Wow. They walked him ‘out of Blair’ in handcuffs? That would mean he was at the school.
Kudos to MCPD for getting the assailant.
Anonymous wrote:1P UPDATE: just watched @mcpnews
walk a young male in handcuffs out of Blair HS. Reached out to @MCPS
to confirm this is the stabbing suspect.
@fox5dc
https://twitter.com/RamirezReports/status/1457771001173856262
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you talking about? I’m talking about the PP comparing the kid having a BB gun to a kid stabbing another kid. What Whitman incident are you talking about?
Not the PP, but they might be thinking of the Whitman student who attacked a Churchill student with a knife, but who was pried off the other girl by parents before an actual stabbing took place.
They mentioned a kid killing 26 people. When did that happen around here?
On December 14, 2012, in Newtown, Connecticut, and it wasn't a gang incident.
Has the world really blocked that horrible incident out already!!? I know there have been tons of shootings since but they were 5/6 year old inside their school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you talking about? I’m talking about the PP comparing the kid having a BB gun to a kid stabbing another kid. What Whitman incident are you talking about?
Not the PP, but they might be thinking of the Whitman student who attacked a Churchill student with a knife, but who was pried off the other girl by parents before an actual stabbing took place.
They mentioned a kid killing 26 people. When did that happen around here?
On December 14, 2012, in Newtown, Connecticut, and it wasn't a gang incident.