The existing policies for school safety in New Jersey
require schools to conduct drills. In
case of an emergency, the drills practiced are the plan for what the students
do. But is a requirement of huddling in the corner of the classroom enough?
Some people agree that the drills are enough to keep the school safe, while
other people are fighting for more. The drills do help the school stay safe,
but there aren’t enough precautions, some people say. Citizens and government workers are
requesting panic buttons and ID cards. What do you guys think: are schools safe
enough or are more precautions needed?
Project Citizen School Safety 2018
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Would you enjoy being stuck in jail, with no way to get out, and without being officially convicted? For a year, two years, even three years of your life that you can never get back? Would you enjoy knowing, that despite all of the effort our founding fathers put into making a fair court system, the government is not seeing you as “innocent until proven guilty.” What’s even worse is that this is happening in, “the land of the ‘free’.”
New Jersey politicians are trying to pass an amendment to “allow courts to order pretrial detention to a person in a criminal case.” They want to keep people safe, but in the process they violate the 5th Amendment to the US Constitution. The amendment states, “No person shall…nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”
This means that it is illegal to keep a person in jail without bail before he or she is convicted by a jury. Pretrial detention does just that. It deprives a person of his or her liberty, slowly ruining their spirit, their reputation, and their chance at success, without due process of law.
On top of that this amendment is very vague. It allows courts to order pretrial detention to “dangerous individuals” who are considered a “threat to society.” Yet both of these terms are left undefined…
English Jurist William Blackstone once said, “It is better that ten guilty persons escape than one innocent suffer.” America has executed innocent people, whose innocence was only proven after they died. What price must we pay to keep our posterity both free and safe? Is safety more important than freedom? Maybe one day we will know, but today isn’t that day.
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