Originally posted by spazzyAnd, NSA, you are right. Statistically I should be worrying about other things. But, I do everything in my control to make that trip to and from school more safe. She has a seat belt, a booster seat, window curtain airbags, crumple zones on the vehicle, as well as safe, defensive driving practices. Once I leave her at the school, I have no control over her safety anymore. I believe that it is that that concerns me the most. I have no control.
Spazzy : You are a mother. you will be concerned and worried about your children ALL your life. Even last year at the age of 74 my mother was worried about my safety after I was given a Bandsaw as a present. (I\'m 50 and put workshop safety as a high priority).
Violence in schools is sadly not just an issue in the USA. Here in the UK the incidence of pupil assaults has risen and again the media choose not to report some of the incidents unless it involves a death.
Working in an Education authority I get to hear some of the stories, A teacher hit by a pupil with a bicycle chain wrapped around a fist, a 10 year old with ADHD attacking another 10 year old and strangling him until the victim was turning Blue. These are just some of the issues I\'ve heard since the start of
this school year.
Although I am not a parent, I do understand the concerns of mothers and fathers about safeguarding their children.
We cannot blame
society in general, because
we are to blame for allowing the culture of defending individual \"human rights\" to rule in preference to the protection of human rights for groups.
We elect our governments (supposedly) on their blankets agendas and then bemoan the fact that they (our Govt\'s) do not carry out our will.
We have forgotten that governments are
our servants, not the reverse and so
we are to blame for not acting to ensure that our governments act according to
our wishes.
It\'s an uphill struggle for parents who want to ensure the safety of their children in schools because
we have allowed the attitude and culture of indifference to take a hold to the extent that so many people now feel powerless to effect any change.
If you wish to effect a change you must act, and to act you must become active. This means organisation of pressure groups and political activity, something to which few people can subscribe. But to those that do take this path, I give you all my moral support and my best wishes.