By John W. Whitehead
“Every day in communities across the United
States, children and adolescents spend the
majority of their waking hours in schools that
have increasingly come to
resemble places of detention more than
places of learning.”—Investigative journalist
Annette Fuentes
February 18, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Just
when you thought the government couldn’t get any
more tone-deaf about civil liberties and the growing
need to protect “we the people” against an
overreaching, overbearing police state, the Trump
Administration ushers in even
more strident zero tolerance policies that treat
children like suspects and criminals,
greater numbers of school cops, and all the
trappings of a prison complex (unsurmountable
fences, entrapment areas, no windows or trees,
etc.).
The fallout has been what you’d expect, with the
nation’s young people treated like hardened
criminals: handcuffed, arrested, tasered, tackled
and taught the painful lesson that the Constitution
(especially the Fourth Amendment) doesn’t mean much
in the American police state.
For example, in Florida, a cop assigned to River
Ridge High School as a school resource officer,
threatened to shoot a student attempting to leave
school for a morning orthodontist appointment.
In Pennsylvania,
school officials called in the cops after a
6-year-old with Down syndrome pointed a finger gun
at her teacher.
In Kentucky, a school resource officer with the
sheriff’s office
handcuffed two elementary school children with
disabilities, ages 8 and 9. A federal judge made
the sheriff’s office pay more than $300,000 (of
taxpayer money) to the families, ruling that the
handcuffing of the students “was
an unconstitutional seizure and excessive force.”
Welcome to Compliance 101: the police state’s
primer in how to churn out compliant citizens and
transform the nation’s school’s into quasi-prisons
through the use of surveillance cameras, metal
detectors, police patrols, zero tolerance policies,
lock downs, drug sniffing dogs, strip searches and
active shooter drills.
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If you were wondering, these police state tactics
have not made the schools any safer.
Rather, they’ve turned the schools into
authoritarian microcosms of the police state,
containing almost every aspect of the militarized,
intolerant, senseless, overcriminalized, legalistic,
surveillance-riddled, totalitarian landscape that
plagues those of us on the “outside.”
Two years after President Trump announced his
intention to “harden”
the schools, our nation’s children are reaping
the ill effects of
gun-toting, taser-wielding cops in
government-run schools that bear an uncomfortable
resemblance to prisons.
America’s schools are about as authoritarian as
they come.
From the moment a child enters
one of the nation’s 98,000 public schools to the
moment he or she graduates, they will be exposed to
a steady diet of:
- draconian zero tolerance policies that
criminalize childish behavior,
- overreaching anti-bullying statutes that
criminalize speech,
- school resource officers (police) tasked
with disciplining and/or arresting so-called
“disorderly” students,
- standardized testing that emphasizes rote
answers over critical thinking,
- politically correct mindsets that teach
young people to censor themselves and those
around them,
- and extensive biometric and surveillance
systems that, coupled with the rest, acclimate
young people to a world in which they have no
freedom of thought, speech or movement.
Young people in America are now first in line to
be searched, surveilled, spied on, threatened, tied
up, locked down, treated like criminals for
non-criminal behavior, tasered and in some cases
shot.
In my day, if you talked back to a teacher, or
played a prank on a classmate, or just failed to do
your homework, you might find yourself in detention
or doing an extra writing assignment after school.
That is no longer the case.
Nowadays, students are not only punished for
minor transgressions such as playing cops and
robbers on the playground, bringing LEGOs to school,
or having a food fight, but the punishments have
become far more severe, shifting from detention and
visits to the principal’s office into misdemeanor
tickets, juvenile court, handcuffs, tasers and even
prison terms.
Students have been suspended under school zero
tolerance policies for bringing to school “look
alike substances” such as
oregano,
breath mints, birth control
pills and
powdered sugar.
Look-alike weapons (toy guns—even Lego-sized
ones, hand-drawn pictures of guns, pencils
twirled in a “threatening” manner, imaginary
bows and arrows, even fingers positioned like guns)
can also land a student in hot water.
Even good deeds do not go unpunished.
One 13-year-old was given detention for exposing
the school to “liability” by
sharing his lunch with a hungry friend. A third
grader was
suspended for shaving her head in sympathy for a
friend who had lost her hair to chemotherapy. And
then there was the high school senior who was
suspended for saying “bless you” after a fellow
classmate sneezed.
In South Carolina, where it’s against the law to
disturb a school, more than a thousand students a
year—some as young as 7 years old—“face
criminal charges for not following directions,
loitering, cursing, or the vague allegation of
acting ‘obnoxiously.’ If charged as adults, they
can be held in jail for up to 90 days.”
These outrageous incidents are exactly what
you’ll see more of if the Trump Administration gets
its way.
Increasing the number of cops in the schools only
adds to the problem.
Thanks to a combination of media hype, political
pandering and financial incentives, the use of armed
police officers (a.k.a. school resource officers) to
patrol school hallways has risen dramatically in the
years since the Columbine school shooting.
Indeed, the
growing presence of police in the nation’s schools
is resulting in
greater police “involvement in routine discipline
matters that principals and parents used to
address without involvement from law enforcement
officers.”
Funded by the U.S. Department of Justice, these
school resource officers (SRO) have become de facto
wardens in elementary, middle and high schools,
doling out their own brand of justice to the
so-called “criminals” in their midst with the help
of
tasers, pepper spray, batons and brute force.
In the absence of school-appropriate guidelines,
police are more and more “stepping in to deal with
minor rulebreaking: sagging pants, disrespectful
comments, brief physical skirmishes. What previously
might have resulted in a detention or a visit to the
principal’s office was replaced with excruciating
pain and temporary blindness, often followed by a
trip to the courthouse.”
The horror stories are legion.
One SRO was accused of punching a 13-year-old
student in the face
for cutting the cafeteria line.
That
same cop put another student in a chokehold a
week later, allegedly knocking the student
unconscious and causing a brain injury.
In Pennsylvania, a student was tasered after
ignoring an order to put his cell phone away.
When 13-year-old Kevens Jean Baptiste failed to
follow a school bus driver’s direction to keep the
bus windows closed (Kevens, who suffers from asthma,
opened the window after a fellow student sprayed
perfume, causing him to cough and wheeze), he was
handcuffed by police, removed from the bus, and
while still handcuffed, had his legs swept out from
under him by an officer, causing him to crash to
the ground.
Young Alex Stone didn’t even make it past the
first week of school before he became a victim of
the police state. Directed by his teacher to do a
creative writing assignment involving a series of
fictional Facebook statuses, Stone wrote, “I
killed my neighbor's pet dinosaur. I bought the gun
to take care of the business.” Despite the fact that
dinosaurs are extinct, the status fabricated, and
the South Carolina student was merely following
orders, his teacher reported him to school
administrators, who in turn called the police.
What followed is par for the course in schools
today: students were locked down in their classrooms
while
armed police searched the 16-year-old’s locker and
bookbag, handcuffed him, charged him with disorderly
conduct disturbing the school, arrested him,
detained him, and then he was suspended from school.
Not even the younger, elementary school-aged kids
are being spared these “hardening” tactics.
On any given day when school is in session,
kids who “act up” in class are pinned facedown on
the floor, locked in dark closets, tied up with
straps, bungee cords and duct tape, handcuffed, leg
shackled, tasered or otherwise restrained,
immobilized or placed in solitary confinement in
order to bring them under “control.”
In almost every case, these undeniably harsh
methods are used to punish kids—some as young as 4
and 5 years old—for simply failing to follow
directions or throwing tantrums.
Very rarely do the kids pose any credible danger
to themselves or others.
Unbelievably,
these tactics are all legal, at least when
employed by school officials or school resource
officers in the nation’s public schools.
This is what happens when you introduce police
and police tactics into the schools.
Paradoxically, by the time you add in the
lockdowns and active shooter drills, instead of
making the schools safer, school officials have
succeeded in creating an environment in which
children are so traumatized that they suffer
from post-traumatic stress disorder, nightmares,
anxiety, mistrust of adults in authority, as well as
feelings of anger, depression, humiliation, despair
and delusion.
For example, a middle school in Washington State
went on
lockdown after a student brought a toy gun to class.
A Boston high school went into
lockdown for four hours after a bullet was
discovered in a classroom. A North Carolina
elementary school locked down and called in police
after a
fifth grader reported seeing an unfamiliar man in
the school (it turned out to be a parent).
Police officers at a Florida middle school
carried out an active shooter drill in an effort to
educate students about how to respond in the event
of an actual shooting crisis. Two armed
officers, guns loaded and drawn, burst into
classrooms, terrorizing the students and placing
the school into lockdown mode.
If these exercises are intended to instill fear
and compliance into young people, they’re working.
As journalist Dahlia Lithwick points out: “I
don’t recall any serious national public dialogue
about lockdown protocols or how they became the
norm. It seems simply to have begun,
modeling itself on the lockdowns that occur during
prison riots, and then spread until school
lockdowns and lockdown drills are as common for our
children as fire drills, and as routine as
duck-and-cover drills were in the 1950s.”
The toll such incidents take on adults can be
life-altering, but when such police brutality is
perpetrated on young people, the end result is
nothing less than complete indoctrination into
becoming compliant citizens of a totalitarian state.
Schools acting like prisons.
School officials acting like wardens.
Students treated like inmates and punished like
hardened criminals.
This is the end product of all those so-called
school “safety” policies, which run the gamut from
zero tolerance policies that punish all infractions
harshly to surveillance cameras, metal detectors,
random searches, drug-sniffing dogs, school-wide
lockdowns, active-shooter drills and militarized
police officers.
Unfortunately, advocates for such harsh police
tactics and weaponry like to trot out the line that
school safety should be our first priority lest we
find ourselves with another Sandy Hook.
What they will not tell you is that such
shootings are
rare.
As one congressional report found, the schools
are, generally speaking,
safe places for children.
In their zeal to crack down on guns and lock down
the schools, these cheerleaders for police state
tactics in the schools might also fail to mention
the lucrative,
multi-million dollar deals being cut with
military contractors such as Taser International to
equip these school cops with tasers, tanks, rifles
and
$100,000 shooting detection systems.
Indeed, the transformation of hometown police
departments into extensions of the military has been
mirrored in the public schools, where
school police have been gifted with high-powered M16
rifles, MRAP armored vehicles, grenade launchers,
and other military gear. One Texas school district
even boasts its own 12-member
SWAT team.
According to one
law review article on the school-to-prison
pipeline, “Many school districts have formed their
own police departments, some so large they rival the
forces of major United States cities in size. For
example, the safety division in New York City’s
public schools is so large that if it were a local
police department, it would be the fifth-largest
police force in the country.”
The ramifications are far-reaching.
There can be no avoiding the hands-on lessons
being taught in the schools about the role of police
in our lives, ranging from active shooter drills and
school-wide lockdowns to incidents in which children
engaging in typically childlike behavior are
suspended (for
shooting an imaginary “arrow” at a fellow
classmate), handcuffed (for
being disruptive at school), arrested (for
throwing water balloons as part of a school
prank), and even tasered (for
not obeying instructions).
Instead of raising up a generation of freedom
fighters—which one would hope would be the objective
of the schools—government officials seem determined
to churn out newly minted citizens of the American
police state who are being taught the hard way what
it means to comply, fear and march in lockstep with
the government’s dictates.
So what’s the answer, not only for the
here-and-now—the children growing up in these
quasi-prisons—but for the future of this country?
How do you convince a child who has been
routinely handcuffed, shackled, tied down, locked
up, and immobilized by government officials—all
before he reaches the age of adulthood—that he has
any rights at all, let alone the right to challenge
wrongdoing, resist oppression and defend himself
against injustice?
Most of all, how do you persuade a fellow
American that the government works for him when, for
most of his young life, he has been incarcerated in
an institution that teaches young people to be
obedient and compliant citizens who don’t talk back,
don’t question and don’t challenge authority?
Peter Gray, a professor of psychology at Boston
College, believes that
school is a prison that is damaging our kids,
and it’s hard to disagree, especially with the
numbers of
police officers being assigned to schools on the
rise.
Students, in turn, are not only finding
themselves subjected to police tactics such as
handcuffs, leg shackles, tasers and excessive force
for “acting up” but are also being
ticketed, fined and sent to court for behavior
perceived as defiant, disruptive or disorderly
such as spraying perfume and writing on a desk.
Clearly, the pathology that characterizes the
American police state has passed down to the
schools.
Now in addition to the government and its agents
viewing the citizenry as suspects to be probed,
poked, pinched, tasered, searched, seized, stripped
and generally manhandled, all with the general
blessing of the courts, our children in the public
schools are also fair game for
school resource officers who taser teenagers and
handcuff kindergartners, school officials who
have
criminalized childhood behavior, school
lockdowns and
terror drills that teach your children to fear
and comply, and a police state mindset that has
transformed the schools into
quasi-prisons.
Don’t even get me started on the
“school-to-prison pipeline,” the phenomenon in which
children who are suspended or expelled from school
have a greater likelihood of ending up in jail. One
study found that “being suspended or expelled made a
student nearly
three times more likely to come into contact
with the juvenile justice system within the next
year.”
By the time the average young person in America
finishes their public school education, nearly
one out of every three of them will have been
arrested. Nearly 40 percent of those young
people who are arrested will serve time in a private
prison, where the
emphasis is on making profits for large
megacorporations above all else.
Indeed, this profit-driven system of
incarceration has also given rise to a growth in
juvenile prisons and financial incentives for
jailing young people. In this way, young people have
become
easy targets for the private prison industry,
which profits from criminalizing childish behavior
and jailing young people.
None of these tactics are making our communities
or schools any safer, and they’re certainly not
contributing to environments in which learning
flourishes. Incredibly, despite the fact that the
U.S. invests more money in public education (roughly
$13,000 per child per year) than many other
developed countries,
we rank around the middle of the pack in science,
math and reading, and behind many other advanced
industrial nations.
Without a doubt, change is needed, but that will
mean taking on the teachers’ unions, the school
unions, the educators’ associations, and the police
unions, not to mention the politicians dependent on
their votes and all of the corporations that profit
mightily from an industrial school complex.
As we’ve seen with other issues, any significant
reforms will have to start locally and trickle
upwards.
For starters, parents need to be vocal, visible
and organized and demand that school officials 1)
adopt a policy of positive reinforcement in dealing
with behavior issues; 2) minimize the presence in
the schools of police officers and cease involving
them in student discipline; and 3) insist that all
behavioral issues be addressed first and foremost
with a child’s parents, before any other
disciplinary tactics are attempted.
As I make clear in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, if you want a nation of criminals,
treat the citizenry like criminals.
If you want young people who grow up seeing
themselves as prisoners, run the schools like
prisons.
If, on the other hand, you want to raise up a
generation of freedom fighters, who will actually
operate with justice, fairness, accountability and
equality towards each other and their government,
then run the schools like freedom forums.
Remove the metal detectors and surveillance
cameras, re-assign the cops elsewhere, and start
treating our nation’s young people like citizens of
a republic and not inmates in a police state
penitentiary.
Constitutional attorney
and author John W. Whitehead is founder and
president of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be
contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
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