So I'm sure a lot of you saw earlier in the week the child suspended from school for a Hello Kitty bubble gun. Now there's a school in Boston who threatened to suspend a 5 year old boy for making a toy gun out of Legos. (link at end of my post). Some of us could use Legos and make something that somewhat resembles a gun, such that someone would know what we made without being told. But a 5 year old makes something in the general shape of the letter "L" out of a handful of blocks, and that makes for an "uncomfortable environment" for others?
It's just sad that schools are so caught up in being PC, they lose sight of what it's like to be an innocent kid with an imagination. This makes me particularly sad, as I have a son who is a little over 5 months old, and can't help but wonder what kind of idiotic or hypocritical environment he'll be subjected to while away at school.
I'm sure many Hide members grew up, playing "cops and robbers", shooting stick or plastic guns at each other. And doing so may have led some to have the desire to serve the community and become, and now are, fine officers of the law. Politics are for adults, and kids shouldn't be expected to conform to the same PC standard for things going on in society beyond they're (complete) comprehension.
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2013/01/29/hy...n-out-of-legos/
It's just sad that schools are so caught up in being PC, they lose sight of what it's like to be an innocent kid with an imagination. This makes me particularly sad, as I have a son who is a little over 5 months old, and can't help but wonder what kind of idiotic or hypocritical environment he'll be subjected to while away at school.
I'm sure many Hide members grew up, playing "cops and robbers", shooting stick or plastic guns at each other. And doing so may have led some to have the desire to serve the community and become, and now are, fine officers of the law. Politics are for adults, and kids shouldn't be expected to conform to the same PC standard for things going on in society beyond they're (complete) comprehension.
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2013/01/29/hy...n-out-of-legos/