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Bomb -> Disruptive Behavior?

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antihaxer

Junior Member
Thanks the childish comment. Christianity differs from Islam in many ways. I will not even bother to go off topic and argue this any further.
Also the teacher who wrote me up has blatantly ignored other students who have been doing wrongful activities. While I do my work and then go to a website that she thinks is inappropriate and i get in trouble... I do not know if this would lessen her credibility somewhat or something like that. Anyways, one student in the class chews tobacco constantly and always has it in his both. He carries around a coke bottle which he spits it into and yet I have not seen the teacher write him up for illegal consumption of tobacco. Also other students do not do their work in the classroom and sleep, talk, and over all misbehave. I am pretty sure that they have actually broken rules in the student hand book of my school. I do not know if bringing this up would hurt or help me, but I thought it might make sense to bring it up.

Columbine is much different IMO. That has to with guns which are much more common and readily available to use. Like I said have you ever head of a school bombing? My intentions were innocent. I do not see how they could be guilty. What harm could a smoke "bomb" do to anyone? It is not like I cannot go to the local quick stop and buy some for a dollar. I just thought it would be interesting to make homemade ones...
 
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seniorjudge

Senior Member
...
Also the teacher who wrote me up has blatantly ignored other students who have been doing wrongful activities. While I do my work and then go to a website that she thinks is inappropriate and i get in trouble... I do not know if this would lessen her credibility somewhat or something like that. Anyways, one student in the class chews tobacco constantly and always has it in his both. He carries around a coke bottle which he spits it into and yet I have not seen the teacher write him up for illegal consumption of tobacco. Also other students do not do their work in the classroom and sleep, talk, and over all misbehave. I am pretty sure that they have actually broken rules in the student hand book of my school. I do not know if bringing this up would hurt or help me, but I thought it might make sense to bring it up.

....


If you say anyways you can't be real bright.

But the stuff you posted above is totally irrelevant.

Here's the deal:

You're a minor.

The computer is not yours.

The computer belongs to the school.

The school makes the rules about computer use.

I agree with Zigner: Plead total stupidity. It's your best bet.
 
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antihaxer

Junior Member
Of course. I would not mind never touching one of their computers again. But the difference between that and getting suspended is much different. No?
 

Silverplum

Senior Member
Columbine is much different IMO. That has to with guns which are much more common and readily available to use. Like I said have you ever head of a school bombing? My intentions were innocent. I do not see how they could be guilty. What harm could a smoke "bomb" do to anyone? It is not like I cannot go to the local quick stop and buy some for a dollar. I just thought it would be interesting to make homemade ones...
You haven't read much about Columbine, have you?
 

antihaxer

Junior Member
I do not really want to argue about that. Information is so much different though than having a gun or something of the sort. Could someone please link me to a school bombing that has occurred in the USA. I have never heard of one before.
 

seniorjudge

Senior Member
Originally Posted by antihaxer
Columbine is much different IMO. That has to with guns which are much more common and readily available to use. Like I said have you ever head of a school bombing? My intentions were innocent. I do not see how they could be guilty. What harm could a smoke "bomb" do to anyone? It is not like I cannot go to the local quick stop and buy some for a dollar. I just thought it would be interesting to make homemade ones...
If you say anyways you can't be real bright.

I take that back.

Amend that to: You are exceptionally stupid!
 

seniorjudge

Senior Member
I do not really want to argue about that. Information is so much different though than having a gun or something of the sort. Could someone please link me to a school bombing that has occurred in the USA. I have never heard of one before.
You are exceptionally stupid!


(Is there an echo in here?)
 

Ozark_Sophist

Senior Member
I do not really want to argue about that. Information is so much different though than having a gun or something of the sort. Could someone please link me to a school bombing that has occurred in the USA. I have never heard of one before.
When I was in high school, we once had 6 bomb threats in one week. After I graduated, a middle school student was found selling pipe bombs for $1 from his locker.

Actual bombings besides Columbine?

There was one this past week that involved a bomb behind a vending machine (bomb was a derived from CO2 and probably the most common form of school bomb). Media coverage for these types of events is limited because of the worry of copy cats.

A former co-worker served two years in the federal prision system for a bomb which cost him his full-ride scholarship as well as plastered his face over CNN headline news. I worked with his brother at the time and the first he knew about it was when he saw his brother's mug shot on CNN during break.

A few more examples from (http://www.schoolsecurity.org/trends/school-bombs.html) (pre-Columbine)

A January, 1999, explosion in a high school locker in Kansas City sent 11 students to the hospital.

An irate parent took the deputy superintendent and an associate superintendent of a California education office hostage in late November of 1998. The standoff resulted in police killing the parent, who had a gun and seven bomb devices as a part of his siege.

Ten bombs, fireworks strapped to aerosol cans, forced the closure of a California elementary school.

One Maryland school district experienced more than 150 bomb threats and 55 associated arrests in one school year.

Up to a pound of ammonium nitrate was brought to school by a Nevada middle-school student.

Eight boys confessed to making three homemade bombs, two of which were placed at a Minnesota elementary school.
 

Ozark_Sophist

Senior Member
Rhode Island. In May 2000, two students were making bottle bombs on an elementary school playground by using hydrochloric acid. The two sustained eye irritation from detonation of one of the bombs. Both were transported to a hospital for treatment and released. The school was evacuated for 1 hour while a hazardous materials (HazMat) team conducted decontamination and debris removal.

Rhode Island. In October 2001, a high school student placed a chemical bomb in a vacant classroom. The bomb, made with sodium hypochlorite, released chlorine gas on explosion. A total of 23 persons (five teachers and 18 students) in the vicinity of the explosion sustained respiratory irritation and were transported to a hospital for treatment and released. The school was evacuated, and a HazMat team conducted decontamination and debris removal.
Two more post-Columbine bomb examples http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5228a3.htm
 

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