I never quite understood this stance when it came to fights and things like that at school. It seems lazy for the most part. I mean, sure... It is probably much easier to say all parties involved in a fight get punished. And it very well may be the case where all parties involved escalated the situation into a fight.However, it is most likely a situation where one person was the aggressor/initiator/instigator... And the other person was defending themselves. So in this case the victim is being punished as well.Can someone help me to understand this?Thanks,A loving and concerned parent.
10/1/2014 7:27:58 AM
It's so people can't accuse administration of favoritism, or unequal punishments. Some people also think it supports a "get tough" attitude.Mostly it's so they don't have to think about the problem, they can just was their hands of it and pull the mandated lever (see Pontious Pilate)
10/1/2014 7:47:19 AM
That makes sense to me. Still, seems so lazy. Not to mention it sends the wrong message.
10/1/2014 7:51:44 AM
it leads to school shootings
10/1/2014 8:13:35 AM
it just sounds good. if they've got a "zero tolerance" policy for harassment, that makes it sound like they're doing everything possible to prevent harassment in all forms.also, it gives them a carte blanche to administer whatever punishment they want. usually the "zero-tolerance" business is not actively applied; but when they want to throw the book at somebody, they can.but mostly, it just sounds good.
10/1/2014 11:58:17 PM
sounds like somebody who takes a sip of beer and a tiny hit off a joint and gets completely wasted
10/2/2014 12:04:19 AM
#victimblaming#rapeculture#checkyourprivilege
10/2/2014 12:09:02 AM
I always imagine it's conservatives who have a need for certainty and don't like nuance and ambiguity who push these kinds of zero-tolerance policies.http://berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2003/07/22_politics.shtml
10/2/2014 12:19:11 AM