We've each been through a rash of lockdowns: both real and practice. Sometimes the practice ones were worse than the real ones. Practicing hiding and being quiet with a group of teens for over an hour is rough. One class that I taught had some gangsters in it. They were actually relishing the thought of someone attacking our room. They spent one lockdown dreaming up murderous plots for any intruder.
A group of us talked about gun control, the need for better access to mental health, and new security procedures. Everyone seemed to have an answer. All of them we've been hearing for years, but two stood out as different: French and Rose Fish, as usual, had a different angle.
Firstly, French said that in his experience he had to protect the kids from other kids; more so than intruders. French and I have stepped in to stop multiple stabbings, and other attacks with weapons. The potentially most lethal was during a huge school wide brawl we pried a long metal pole with a hook (used to move basketball nets in and out from the wall) from one guy's hand. This student was trying to plunge the hook into another student's skull. Oddly, every time we broke up a fight, or attack,our reputation would grow as always being around trouble. There is almost negative pressure from my peers to step in too often. Currently, we are not even allowed to break up a fight physically. Our job is to observe the fight and then write up a report that is adjective, and bias free and submit it to a bureaucrat.
Secondly, Rose listened to us all to finish up our tale telling, and then she said: "No policy reform or bureaucratic procedure is going to stop evil. You'll all have to wait for Jesus to come set this all straight."
5 comments:
Rose is right.
Amen Rose.
I wrote about my favorite idea the other day, which is just to be nice. So many who carry out these crimes are people who are rejected and really feel it. I think they stop viewing others as human. My husband agrees w/ me; he says we need to engage so as to know what's happening.
Dear Rose was mistaken. That is silly and impossibly simple. Jesus wanted us to live by example not wait for him to clean up the mess. The machine may have made you impotent to make decisions. That is the job of bureaucracy. It is our choice as to how we will act. The killer made a decision. "The devil made him do it!" some say. Or did he do it? He did. But where was the family? Where was the "community?" Is it a community? Or just a bunch of people who own houses? It's our choice as to how the world will be. Let's choose to engage, listen and understand and not run from the responsibility.
Ollie ... thank you for your "take on this." There are so many different perspectives. I agree with Brandee Shafer in the comments. We are a society so out of control that I am not sure that there are any precise answers.
Thank you for your words over the past year. I wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
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