Erik is touching on my views here. I believe this is a serious matter -
threats can't be taken lightly, but I worry that every word written in
private can be used to prosecute some law rather than catalyze this young
man's mental health support system.

In harsher terms, merely writing a threat does not make it one - and, in
fact, threats are not assaults. This is Orwellian intrusion into privacy,
even as I'm glad his troubled state has been discovered.

But why the hell is he being charged??

We continue to wander into dangerously anti-Constitutional territory in our
quest for "security" which no arrest of a frustrated and disturbed young boy
caught writing mean things will ensure.

Why does our system first prosecute rather than first examine? It's the
inhumane condition of our current culture and we will never survive this if
we continue down this path.

Andy Driscoll
Crocus Hill/Ward 2
------

Date: Wed, 20 Oct 2004 11:58:17 -0500 (CDT)
From: Erik Hare <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Naturally, I do not know the content of this kid's work.  But I have
trouble believing it's any worse than a lot of raps I've heard.

There are a lot of troubled kids out there, because we live in a time when
kids are forced to be "institutionalized" by so many different forces out
there.  That the mondola High Schools are part of this is a damned shame.
Some of these kids think about acting out, and others do (re:  Prince's
new video, "Cinammin Girl").

I sense a growing Big Brotherliness that has people snooping around where
they shouldn't be into these kids' private lives.   This can only make the
problem worse, and is a total perversion of any kind of basic values and
decency, IMHO.  I can't see how a High School is supposed to be ultimately
responsible for taking care of this -- indeed, the structure is a huge
part of the problem.

There is an off chance that had I seen the work I might feel differently.
I doubt it, tho.  I used to read "Soldier of Fortune" when I was in High
School, for example, and I turned out fine (enough).  The invasion of
privacy, to me, is a symptom of just what is wrong in the big meatgrinder
of a prison we call a "High School" today.

Erik Hare

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