--- In [email protected], off_world_beings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > -- the TM school in India was not > > singled out by Indian authorities.>> > > I know that. > You singled the TM movement out by saying that the 'principal' > (Bevan) should have been arrested. It is a stupid thing to say, and > prejudiced against TMO. You would not ask for that of any other head > of any school in the US. It was a faulty comment and you should and > admit it, and move on. >
******** I've worked at schools in LA where there were armed cops on patrol and a host of measures to keep violence down. If a murder happens in that environment, I would not advocate a principal being arrested, school officals are almost always doing as much as they can in an ugly and litigious setting. It was different at MUM when that student was murdered -- school mgmt had an opportunity to isolate the student after his first act of violence that day, a stabbing, but they failed to exercise the due diligence that any reasonable person would exercise (because they did not want to involve the police, which would have meant a crime of violence stat would be entered for the school), which means that they are guilty of negligence. Normally in the USA, school officials who are guilty of negligence are sued in civil courts (evidently that did not happen with the MUM murder, or there was an outofcourt settlement before a lawsuit was filed), and are not arrested like they are in India and many other countries -- so I was not seriously suggesting that Bevan could be arrested, but he is a criminally negligent and inept administrator (although a world-class competitor in the competitive eating field http://www.ifoce.com/contests.php ), and I am expressing my displeasure with his fatassed incompetence and arrogance. Bob http://geocities.com/bbrigante/index.html#murder > <<MUM mgmt did display negligence > > after the first assault by Sem in March 2003, and if they had > acted > > properly, the following murder in the campus dining hall would not > > have taken place. >>> > > People make mistakes. Leave the poor guy alone. The guy that was in > charge of him must feel awful. You and I could easily have made the > same mistake. You can't predict everything precisely. Sems actions > were out of the blue. It was a mistake that someone made, even niave > negligence, but not a big crime. Adn everyone knows that. > If you want to go after a criminal, go after GW Bush or Cheney etc. > They are international fugatives from coming lawsuits for war > crimes. > That's my next assignment. > <<It's up to the people of India to decide what to do > > about the principal of the Maharishi school who ignored the pleas > of > > students whose lunches were being stolen -- I would certainly call > > this negligence, myself, and if more managers in the USA and in TM > > mgmt were subject to jail, then it might make them more attentive > to their responsibilities.>>> > > > You're pretty judgemental. What do you do for a living? http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0624041pump1.html To subscribe, send a message to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Or go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/ and click 'Join This Group!' Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
