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Quoted By: >>54660437 >>54660665 >>54660888 >>54661533 >>54662665 >>54663473 >>54668504 >>54669700 >>54669818 >>54670276
A school resource officer did a Q&A and answered a question relating to this video of a school resource officer bodyslamming a kid. I figured that it would give you guys perspective.
The problem was that he did this on reddit. /pol/ doesn't like reddit. So, here's an archive link:
https://archive.is/TRuk4
Does /pol/ approve? Here are some highlights from what he said:
>Situation: A kid does something goofy in class, maybe he talks out of turn, throws something at another kid, mouths off to the teacher, and gets sent to the principals office. Nothing criminal has occurred. Kid refuses to go, won't leave class, so teacher calls principal, principals sends me to pull the kid out.
>This is a gigantic fucking problem. The situation can only play out a handful of ways. If the kid comes willingly, crisis averted. But what if he doesn't?
>Now you have two options. You could try to talk him out, but if that fails, then what? If you don't succeed, that whole class is watching you. As a cop, you'll neuter yourself.
>So you have one more option. Force him out. Do it gently, sure, but if he struggles or fights back, then what? Now you're fighting a kid.
>But here's the motherfucker: You're fighting a kid for a non-criminal school infraction. You, a 200 lbs certified police officer, are fighting a fucking kid for a goddamn school infraction. If I sound mad, it's because I am.
This calls into question: Is it necessary to call a school resource officer for minor school infractions?
The problem was that he did this on reddit. /pol/ doesn't like reddit. So, here's an archive link:
https://archive.is/TRuk4
Does /pol/ approve? Here are some highlights from what he said:
>Situation: A kid does something goofy in class, maybe he talks out of turn, throws something at another kid, mouths off to the teacher, and gets sent to the principals office. Nothing criminal has occurred. Kid refuses to go, won't leave class, so teacher calls principal, principals sends me to pull the kid out.
>This is a gigantic fucking problem. The situation can only play out a handful of ways. If the kid comes willingly, crisis averted. But what if he doesn't?
>Now you have two options. You could try to talk him out, but if that fails, then what? If you don't succeed, that whole class is watching you. As a cop, you'll neuter yourself.
>So you have one more option. Force him out. Do it gently, sure, but if he struggles or fights back, then what? Now you're fighting a kid.
>But here's the motherfucker: You're fighting a kid for a non-criminal school infraction. You, a 200 lbs certified police officer, are fighting a fucking kid for a goddamn school infraction. If I sound mad, it's because I am.
This calls into question: Is it necessary to call a school resource officer for minor school infractions?
