• @[email protected]
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    153 months ago

    Something I often think about: when people make obviously wrong and very public decisions like this, do they have to hear about it from people they know personally? Like, do this principal’s friends know how funny it would be to insist on using a finger gun gesture every time they see him for the rest of his life? And the joy of getting to explain the joke every time you introduce to him to anyone…

    Maybe this is why I don’t have that many friends, lmao.

    • work is slow
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      53 months ago

      On the bright side, the friends you do have probably wouldn’t expel a kid for finger guns.

    • @Nurgus
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      13 months ago

      I agree but then logically, surely there’s more yo the story? If something is too ridiculous to be true then it makes me very suspicious.

        • @Nurgus
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          03 months ago

          No, quite the reverse. Ridiculous stories in the news often turn out to be clickbait when you dig deeper.

          “Woman sues mcdonalds over hot coffee!”

          “Scientist studying the thickness of custard!”

          Maybe it’s because I’m British and I’m used to our batshit crazy tabloid newspapers.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    This is a pretty convoluted situation. The law seems extreme in its application, yet we’ve very recently had a teacher shot by an angry child of only six years. Unfortunately for this child, who may not have been a legitimate threat, our society has not addressed the larger issues at hand, so useless laws like this that won’t actually solve the problem make some people feel better.