Over 200 school attacks have been executed in the past 7 years with the death toll being an accumulated 116. Research has shown that more than 400 potential school shootings have been stopped by analysis of social media activity and that with monitoring youths google searches, email patterns, and text/phone discourses the number of young deaths could be dropped by 50%. The case that decided all schools need to protect their students is reasonable suspicion. I’m no politician or law representative, but I would assume reasonable suspicion should include the monitoring, by any means, of all problematic students attending ones school, isn’t that really the bases behind Reasonable Suspicion? This isn’t a hard task to accomplish, so why is it so hard to understand that human lives ought to be saved by using the most modern of monitoring techniques? The facade of “privacy protects†is what’s going to kill your child. When you send your little girl to school you expect her to be protected, you expect her to be safe; when you put your child on the bus you hope the person they’re sitting next to isn’t armed. This hope can be realized and can be accomplished simply by the school monitoring what your child's peers are doing on the
Over 200 school attacks have been executed in the past 7 years with the death toll being an accumulated 116. Research has shown that more than 400 potential school shootings have been stopped by analysis of social media activity and that with monitoring youths google searches, email patterns, and text/phone discourses the number of young deaths could be dropped by 50%. The case that decided all schools need to protect their students is reasonable suspicion. I’m no politician or law representative, but I would assume reasonable suspicion should include the monitoring, by any means, of all problematic students attending ones school, isn’t that really the bases behind Reasonable Suspicion? This isn’t a hard task to accomplish, so why is it so hard to understand that human lives ought to be saved by using the most modern of monitoring techniques? The facade of “privacy protects†is what’s going to kill your child. When you send your little girl to school you expect her to be protected, you expect her to be safe; when you put your child on the bus you hope the person they’re sitting next to isn’t armed. This hope can be realized and can be accomplished simply by the school monitoring what your child's peers are doing on the