MASS
MURDER: COMING TO A SCHOOL NEAR YOU
Why Meadow Died doesn’t focus primarily on the murderer of seventeen people at Broward
County’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas (MSD) High School on Valentine’s Day, 2018,
though the book does contain chapters describing the troubled life of Nikolas
Cruz (often designated by his prison
number, 18-1958, to avoid giving the killer further notoriety). Instead, most of this compelling work exposes
the “restorative justice” discipline model brought to Broward County schools by
Superintendent Robert Runcie, someone without a background in education who was
a Chicago-based IT employee of Obama’s Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan. It was Runcie’s lenient, racially-focused
model that virtually created the mass murderer at MSD High School. Even worse, that same discipline approach is
creating toxic environments in schools across the country thanks to leftist
pressure groups and Obama’s Education Secretary -- thus, the book’s subtitle: The People and Policies that Created the
Parkland Shooter and Endanger America’s Students.
Why Meadow Died was written by Andrew
Pollack, the father of Meadow, in conjunction with the Manhattan Institute’s senior
fellow in education policy, Max Eden. Meadow was one of seventeen students and
adults murdered at MSD High School, a tragedy that happened not because of the
availability of guns, but because an ideologically-driven bureaucratic system demanded
fake statistics about arrests, suspensions, and student behavior to prove the
efficacy of Runcie’s disciplinary approach.
This bogus data was required if teachers and administrators were to
survive or advance within this corrupt system.
After
the Parkland shooting, media attention focused overwhelmingly, as it always
does, on “gun control.” The sham “town
hall” produced by CNN after the massacre gave an heroic platform to Broward
County Sheriff Scott Israel whose department response to the shooting provided
a textbook example of malpractice. The show’s
host and questioners ignored the fact that Israel had cooperated
enthusiastically in a school program that all but ignored criminal behavior by
students, including actions that would have made it impossible for Cruz to
purchase a firearm. Meanwhile, in the
wake of the shooting Superintendent Runcie received accolades for a policy that, according
to Pollock and Eden, was at much to blame for the massacre as Cruz himself.
Runcie’s
leftist-inspired program claimed that traditional school discipline is both
punitive and discriminatory since minority students are suspended and punished
at rates higher than white students. This
and other disparities provided for reformers clear evidence that teachers were
racially biased and that the traditional system of discipline was destructive for
minority groups. To make matters worse,
kids who often misbehaved, even those issuing threats and engaging in fights,
were regularly labeled “special-needs” and thus put in another potentially “victimized”
grouping. The obvious explanation that fatherless
homes and hostile environments largely account for statistical disparities was
dismissed as racist [as these explanations also are, I might add, by urban District Attorneys funded by George
Soros]. “Social justice,” reformers insist, demands
that suspensions and punishments for blacks, whites, Hispanics, and
special-needs kids be equally distributed. Furthermore, since punitive punishment and
law enforcement involvement is viewed as feeding the “school-to-prison
pipeline,” Runcie’s program set out to drastically lower such punishments, especially
arrests.
To
achieve these goals it was necessary to ignore bad behavior, to make reporting
even egregious misbehavior bureaucratically burdensome, and to provide the
“least restrictive” punishment for disciplinary violations. The disastrous result of this approach was
predictable -- increased bullying by kids who had little to fear for misbehavior,
even for actions that extended to death threats and assaults. The consequence for teachers who didn’t produce
the desired statistics was also predictable: “Give a warning. Issue a consequence. Be labeled a racist.” So while the numbers for suspensions and
arrests dropped dramatically, making Runcie and his program a nationwide model,
the numbers didn’t reflect reality. Meanwhile,
many students in Broward County were placed in normal classrooms alongside
felons. And at MSD students were interacting
on campus with someone who should have been a felon or at the very least placed
in a special education setting and denied access to guns.
The
information provided in a chapter devoted exclusively to 18-1958 is chilling --
Cruz’s family background, his bloody fantasies, his cruelty to animals, a
vicious assault that he initiated on campus, and his incessant threats to kill
himself and others, threats that were consistently minimized both by school
officials and Parkland police. The fact
that he was eventually placed back in a regular school setting and even allowed
to enroll in Junior ROTC caps off a host of decisions that illustrate the
incompetence and ideological rigidity of those implementing school policy.
This
mismanagement is further highlighted in a chapter that provides an incomplete
list of forty-two ways Meadow’s death and, in many cases, the entire Parkland shooting,
could have been avoided. The list implicates,
among others, Runcie’s discipline policy, the pathetic Broward County police
response, the incompetent and predatory MSD security monitor, School Resource Officer
Scot Peterson (who remained in a safe space holding the only gun on campus
while students were being murdered), failure to secure all entrances to the
campus, and failure of the district to install an alarm system that wouldn’t
send students on a deadly fire drill during a shooting.
The
final chapters of Why Meadow Died relate the attempt by Pollack, Eden,
and others to change the composition of Broward County’s school board and to
oust the always politically conscious and often vindictive Runcie from his
position. Highlighted in this section is
a courageous teen journalist named Kenny Preston who confronted Runcie and the
Board with critical facts they invariably deflected, misrepresented, or denied.
In an act of unbelievable spite against this
young man with mild cognitive issues, Kenny was denied graduation for what seem
trivial reasons. In the authors’ view,
“At the end of the school year, Kenny was the only person in the entire Broward
County school district to face any consequences for what happened on February
14.” Likewise, the mendacity,
intimidation, and cowardice displayed during the school board election was a
true reflection of the powers that be in Broward County and of the 2-to-1
Democrat constituency that not only featured a blow-hard judge, Elijah Williams,
who referred to the Parkland massacre as a “so-called tragedy” but also returned
to power (over a man who lost his daughter in the massacre) a school board
lackey who had the audacity to call 2018 “an amazing school year.”
The
reason the authors believe another school massacre like Parkland’s is
inevitable is that Runcie’s “social justice” discipline model has been implemented
in hundreds of districts throughout the country, something Max Eden illustrates
with numerous horror tales in chapter nine -- tales typically related by
teachers so intimidated by administrators that they speak anonymously. This lemming-like institutional behavior
isn’t simply a consequence of the ideological conformity that characterizes education
professionals. It also stems from a
“Dear Colleague” letter sent by Obama’s Education Secretary, Arne Duncan
(Runcie’s old boss) that in effect threatens to investigate and bring civil
rights suits against schools that fail to pursue discipline policies like those
in Broward County and to produce similar statistical results. Though the Trump Administration revoked
Duncan’s directive, school districts throughout the country still cling to the
ineffective and dangerous approach that teaches kids most at risk that there will
be no significant consequences even for criminal behavior -- a lesson many will
rue once they are out of school. Of
course the victims most to be pitied for these policies are students and teachers
who are bullied, assaulted, and occasionally murdered by the fruit of Arne
Duncan and Robert Runcie’s politically-correct reform tree -- victims like
Meadow and her family.
Richard Kirk is a freelance writer living in
Southern California whose book Moral Illiteracy:
"Who's to Say?" is also available
on Kindle
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