“We want to harness the power of (the) technology to make schools safer, know where our students are all the time in a school, and increase revenues..." [More]That's assuming students fed up with being treated like inmates trained for life in an institution instead of taught how to assume the mantle of free citizens don't also harness the power of technology (for $19.99, and it's in stock). Or they could take the economy route and outfit the entire student body with a roll of this. Besides, does moron Pascual really think he and his fellow bureaucratic dinosaurs have a technology leg up on the next generation?
And did you see how much money these irresponsible control freak fools are spending on this stupid, intrusive, totally non-workable boondoggle? Time to see how many parents in that district aren't hopeless cud-chewers--the fact that the reporter could find supportive ungulates to quote is a good indicator of why some of their offspring may not want to hang around and continue being subjected to daily offenses against their human potential.
And they wonder why some snap.
Time to have one student carry everyone else's badges into the class in his/her backpack. :)
ReplyDeleteParents who don't like this idea - I understand that hammers have an excellent neutralizing factor on such things...
Incidentally, did it ever occur to anyone that students with their badges, even in their backpack, could be tracked anywhere, by anyone with an RFID reading array?
ReplyDeleteSimply sitting outside the school recording returns to create a database would be enough to then allow someone with a powerful enough rig to drive around town logging students' locations.
Government: Taking over your life one camel's nose under the tent at a time.
ReplyDeleteAnother step in the direction that the "ones" want to take us. Start with the students. A step at a time. By the time these kids have kids in school, this will be no big deal unless they are educated soon.
ReplyDeleteThe NRA store also has the RFID blocking wallets.