quote:
I think a white kid would get that reaction for this. I think painting this as a reaction someone had because of brown skin, when the kid himself admits it looked threatening is stupid.
I think this statement is profoundly wrong.
quote:
I think a white kid would get that reaction for this. I think painting this as a reaction someone had because of brown skin, when the kid himself admits it looked threatening is stupid.
quote:quote:1. Nobody in their right mind would look at it and think it was a bomb. Therefore the probability of somebody not being in their right mind, and consequently thinking it was a bomb, is a low probability risk. He incorrectly assessed that risk, because he's young and did not fully realize the extent to which islamophobia has permeated Texas.quote:quote:he identified a low probability risk, took a mitigating action, and proceeded as planned.quote:
I honestly don't think Jacques knows the meaning of the word "intent"
Maybe the kid recognized there was a risk involved, possible. And maybe he also wrongly assumed that no rational person in their right mind would think there was an actual threat. Well I guess he learned his lesson, never underestimate the potent combination of paranoia, bigotry, and ignorance pervasive in Texas
He said he thought it looked like a threat.
If he intended to make it look like a threat he would not have taken the aforementioned mitigating action.
case closed
Where do you get the low probability stuff from? And how does putting s cable on it mitigate it?
2. Whether you or I perceive his mitigation plan to be valid is irrelevant. He perceived it to be valid, which shows a clear indicator that his intent was to make it clear to people that it was not a bomb, but was a clock he was very proud of. His mitigation plan may have been bad, but that's just bad planning and not malicious intent.
the definition of a "hoax" is a malicious deception.
He demonstrated no malice, and he took steps to do what he thought would make sure people weren't deceived by his device, including telling everybody that it was a clock.
Furthermore, when he showed it to his teacher and it was brought to his attention that he had not properly mitigated the risk he surrendered it for the teacher's protection, instead of then crying foul play or discrimination. He again demonstrated that he was not trying to deceive anybody.
Only after he did all of these things, and the device was no longer in his position, no longer capable of deceiving anybody, did the situation escalate out of his control.
quote:quote:
I think a white kid would get that reaction for this. I think painting this as a reaction someone had because of brown skin, when the kid himself admits it looked threatening is stupid.
I think this statement is profoundly wrong.
quote:quote:Do you even George Orwell, bro?quote:
So people want to convict him of thought crime? That's not america. That's not even mexico.
What's the thought crime?
quote:quote:quote:
I think a white kid would get that reaction for this. I think painting this as a reaction someone had because of brown skin, when the kid himself admits it looked threatening is stupid.
I think this statement is profoundly wrong.
Authority figures in school often overreact to things. I have my own story about that. It's kind of hard to deny that there are a lot of idiotic zero tolerance stories and stories of overreaction to basically nothing.
quote:quote:quote:quote:
I think a white kid would get that reaction for this. I think painting this as a reaction someone had because of brown skin, when the kid himself admits it looked threatening is stupid.
I think this statement is profoundly wrong.
Authority figures in school often overreact to things. I have my own story about that. It's kind of hard to deny that there are a lot of idiotic zero tolerance stories and stories of overreaction to basically nothing.
I don't disagree at all with this.
However, I think to ignore the fact that he's muslim is extremely naive, weird or oblivious as it relates to how he was treated.
quote:
Seemingly immune to Jacque's airtight, unassailable logic, Google and MIT and just about every other tech company or institution of higher learning is tripping over themselves extending invites to the kid.
I'd wager thats because people like Jacques are ****ing moron oxygen thieves and they are being mocked on a national scale.
Please, keep posting.
quote:Pretty sure my idiot middle school teachers would have taken this seriously. That looks nothing like a clock and they value their retirement more than me. Dumb on the kid's part, too.
quote:guessing you didn't read anything else in the thread. How big do you think that "bomb" is, based on that picture?quote:Pretty sure my idiot middle school teachers would have taken this seriously. That looks nothing like a clock and they value their retirement more than me. Dumb on the kid's part, too.
quote:lol "briefcase"
Was this posted on the Politics board?
quote:1. nowhere other than that graphic has referred to it as a countdown clock.
So it was a countdown clock mounted to the side of a briefcase. Brought by a Muslim. Can't imagine why anybody might be cautious with that.
quote:if your CHILD was detained and interrogated, are you saying you would just let it slide?
Love how they "lawyered up". Just like they do another peaceful Islamic nations.
quote:.
Tell me, when was the last time a muslim student took weapons or a bomb to school?
quote:A minor child was interrogated by the police for 1 1/2 hours without his parents being present, despite his asking for them at least twice. This was, in fact, a violation of the child's rights. Furthermore, his parents should have been promptly informed that he had been arrested. They were not.
Love how they "lawyered up".
quote:quote:A minor child was interrogated by the police for 1 1/2 hours without his parents being present, despite his asking for them at least twice. This was, in fact, a violation of the child's rights. Furthermore, his parents should have been promptly informed that he had been arrested. They were not.
Love how they "lawyered up".
If it were my child, I'd be hiring council, too. Even if my child had done something stupid.