General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: I don't get all the resistance to putting a cop in schools [View all]wickerwoman
(5,662 posts)It just feeds the climate of paranoia and fear that prompts people, on hearing of a school shooting, to run out and buy more guns instead of pausing for a minute to be a human being.
Also, and I say this with all due respect, I've worked in companies that had cops doing regular patrols and many of them were not the kind of people I'd want working around kids packing heat. Some were not the brightest bulbs on the tree, some were racist or sexist or homophobic, some were lazy, some got off on power and authority, some were just irritable and didn't like children, some enjoyed high-risk, thrill-seeking behavior, some were just miserable alcoholics.
If you think we have problems now with six year olds being tased or handcuffed or restrained on the ground with a knee to the neck, wait until we have armed cops patrolling every school in the land. We practically do already and yet school shootings continue to occur and if anything seem to be happening more frequently.
Also, kids rise to the level of your expectations. If you treat them like criminals, that's how they will come to see themselves and that's how they will act. A teen's response to cops patrolling the school halls is not "Thank God he's here to keep me safe". It's "since I'm going to be monitored like a criminal anyway, I might as well act like one and get the benefit".
Seeing a cop doesn't increase the feeling of security. It serves as a constant reminder of one's insecurity and I think that's psychologically unhealthy for kids disproportionate to the risk of them being a victim of a school shooting.