• @datelmd5sum@lemmy.world
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    541 year ago

    I’m not from the US, but isn’t this against the 4th?

    Generally, a search or seizure is illegal under the Fourth Amendment if it happens without consent, a warrant, or probable cause to believe a crime has been committed.

    • 1chemistdown
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      121 year ago

      It’s only against the amendment if the families can afford to litigate. This is not going to happen in those schools (and by those I mean predominantly white middle/upper class racist).

        • The school isn’t private propery, but the backpack/bag is what they were calling private property. Unfortunately parents sign away just about all of their kids rights when they sign them up for school.

          As for my experience, they would show up a few times a year, usually because someone ratted out someone for having drugs. They would walk the dog through the halls by the lockers when we were in class. It was rare to ever encounter one of the dogs. If you were the one that got ratted out you would have been pulled out of class. The worst I had experience with was an upset girlfriend whom stuck a gram of weed between the backseat cushions of the car her boyfriend was driving. She reported him as having drugs in his car and he got expelled… over a gram of weed that he didn’t know existed.

          The right to search your car I believe you have to grant to get a parking permit, which once again is walking the line with shouldn’t be legal.

    • @Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      It’s K-9 units.

      The police love their dogs so much because smells aren’t protected like that. They don’t need a warrant to pass by you, but passing by you is all a dog needs. If a dog smells weed, that’s probable cause, and now they can do a real search.

      In this case random K-9 searches just means there’ll be a cop and a dog walking around, seeing what the dog smells, maybe generating that probable cause.

        • @Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          Corruption isn’t relevant to the original and stated purpose, which doesn’t violate the constitution’s rules for searches and seizures.

          Corruption is a problem, but a separate one.

          • @Foggyfroggy@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            Pretty sure corruption is included in the law. The false positive rate rate for dogs is abysmal. Might as well be magical beeping devices like we sell to Iraq for “bomb detection”, the ade651.

  • @Wirrvogel@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    The school around the corner here (Germany) has a “school dog”. Its job is to help teach kids how to approach dogs, how to stay safe in the presence of dogs, read their body language, stay away from dogs that run around alone, always ask the owner first etc., kids can get a “dog petter licence” by succeding in a test.

    The dog’s second job is to be in the class rooms once a week for every class and just go from child to child and help them to calm down.

    Kids stop throwing things to the ground because the dog might eat it and get sick. Kids tend to be not so loud because they learn that dogs can hear way better than humans and loud noise can make them feel uncomfortable and even hurt them. The kids learn to make sure the dog’s bowl has always fresh water and when the dog decides to go to its resting place to respect that and not to disturb it. Teachers say it has a good influence on the relationship between teachers and school children and between the children and teachers faces light up too when they can pet a dog after a stressful hour in class. It calms nervous kids down and helps concentration in the class room and who wants to fight if the dog could get nervous and not understands what’s going on?

    The older kids are now even involved in helping with training a puppy to also become a school dog.

    https://www.brakenhoffschule.de/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/FullSizeRender.mov

    The idea of a police dog in schools is sending shivers down my spine.

    If a government treats every child as a potential criminal first before thinking of protecting it, then something is really wrong.

      • @Wirrvogel@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        I have no idea. It will probably depend on the severity of the allergy. Maybe not touching the dog is enough. I know people who have a cat allergy and have cats and cat allergies are usually more severe than the ones against dogs. They seem to have found a way, since the dog(s) are there for a while now. It is estimated that more than 1000 schools in Germany currently have dogs in some form or the other in pedagogic/educational use.

        Some schools only use the dogs in one specific school room, some have dogs that only visit the school once in a while and some have them there all the time. Prior to active participation in the dog-assisted lessons, parents were informed in detail and in writing, including a declaration of consent and a questionnaire about the children’s allergies and fears.

    • @Bernie_Sandals@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Oh, so you’re saying the high school I went to shouldn’t have patrolled dogs down the hallways/past lockers once a week randomly to search for drugs?

  • @dill
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    451 year ago

    classroom safety

    Something tells me this is not going to be making anyone any safer.

      • They don’t have security in the halls, those are actual police that will send you to real jail, with a real record, for the standard bullshit behavioral problems and trouble that almost all teens go through. And these kids know that there is always a very real possibility that the police with just murder them and then get rewarded with a paid vacation.

  • FuglyDuck
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    421 year ago

    …. What are they screening for?

    I mean, you know. If they’re like anxiety dogs, and they give out cuddles….

    (Who am i kidding this is Florida.)

    • I know you’re kidding, but you touch on a very real point that I think will pass unnoticed by many. You know that this will be in predominantly poor schools. Schools that are attended mostly by people of color. I’m reluctant to make generalizations, but I have encountered far more children of color afraid of or anxious around dogs of any size relative to white children. I don’t know all the reasons why, but my gut says to blame the use of police dogs against people in their neighborhood, in their families, and people on TV that look like them. Maybe my experience is anecdotal and my experience is not the norm, but I no longer assume that all children will be friendly with or calmed by interaction with a dog, even a very calm friendly dog. Having grown up with dogs, it’s hard to empathize with that, but I try to be sympathetic. These dogs are only there to instill fear in kids from a young age and to train them to abdicate their dwindling rights to the people in power.

      • Flying Squid
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        41 year ago

        Even white, privileged kids can be afraid of dogs. My daughter’s friend, who is white and at least middle class, is terrified of our dogs. She won’t come over to our house.

        Admittedly, one is 60 pounds, but the other is only 15 pounds and is basically a cuddle machine. She’s terrified of both of them.

        • I don’t disagree with you in fact, but this comment is what-about-ism and arguing a straw-man since I never claimed privileged kids couldn’t be afraid of dogs. As a result, it comes off a little racist, regardless of your hopefully we’ll meaning intentions.

      • FuglyDuck
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        11 year ago

        You’re right of course.

        Maybe we should used trained rabbits. Can you train rabbits?

      • elouboub
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        61 year ago

        DeSantis personally entering the classroom and screaming “UNACCEPTABLE!!!”

      • FuglyDuck
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        1 year ago

        Uh huh.

        If they could train dogs to rat out lgbtq kids they probably would.

        • EnderofGames
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          11 year ago

          This was actually my original thought :/ It should be a joke, but then again, so should drug searches.

      • LanternEverywhere
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        101 year ago

        Such an idiotic move. If a kid already had a gun in their possession but they weren’t yet sure if they should actually do any killing, having a cop come toward them with a weapon-sniffing dog that will get them in huge trouble will almost definitely cause them to panic and actually start shooting.

        • Melody Fwygon
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          41 year ago

          This is, unfortunately very likely. Worse is that this won’t do anything to stop kids from doing what they do. It will just lead to more situations where a kid is probably going to be very harshly punished when no harm was actually done, no drugs were consumed, and no weapons were used.

          But now; with this randomized dog screening; there are going to be more incidents than there would normally be. Kids will bring illicit materials, objects and substances to school for many reasons that don’t involve using them. Some of the time they just want to look or seem cool, edgy or rebellious and they don’t actually realize the gravity of what they’re doing.

      • TheProtagonist
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        81 year ago

        But isn’t every good kid with a gun a solution against a bad kid with a gun? /s

    • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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      81 year ago

      *Florida’s schools.

      My kid’s starting kindergarten Monday. His school is vastly superior to mine.

      He doesn’t have green screen Oregon Trail though. He’ll never know the joy.

  • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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    271 year ago

    “We should probably get them used to intrusive police surveillance right from an early age.”

    • @LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Grew up in the Orlando area. Police dogs were used back when I was in high school and before every once in a while to search for drugs. I graduated in 08’ and I know they were there in at least 2002. (Sibling 2 years older)

      Wish they wouldn’t do it, but it appears to just be new for them trying to sniff out gunpowder(?). Unsure what the chemicals they would be looking for with a gun if it isn’t that. … side note, all of the K-9 units still have guns, so won’t the dogs just be smelling the officers handguns if it were gunpowder they could possibly smell?

      • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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        131 year ago

        K9 units are a dog and pony show. Various studies have shown the dogs key on the handler way more often than they scent anything. They’re just there to create probable cause.

        • @flucksy_bango@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Coincidentally, I went to high school in central Florida at that time. They had dogs show up to sniff students’ cars while we were in class. A couple of kids got in trouble. Mostly black kids at my predominantly white school.

          Funny thing, I had weed in my car. Hell, I was smoking on my way to school. I smoked cigarettes in the parking lot when I was leaving every day. It’s not like I was being subtle about anything.

          I didn’t get in any trouble. It’s all horseshit. Back then I thought they were suckers for getting caught. These days I think the reason why they got caught and I didn’t is far more grim.

  • Teach less and police more. The kids of Florida are in the cross fire of DeSantis idea to become the best hate state he can be. I’m really hoping business will see this and start moving out before they get brain drain.

    I really hope the Floridians will vote out the party of hate and greed and power along with the rest of us. I bet this will keep the younger population out and the older will probably vote for anyone with an R.

    I have never seen that much hate in politics because Im not old enough for the civil rights day but the hate is strong with the GOP.

  • @NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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    201 year ago

    Who wants to bet that the random screening won’t be random at all? No way they are going to be doing this at the wealthy schools.

    • be_excellent_to_each_other
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      51 year ago

      “This month, just like last month, we’ve randomly chosen schools with the least number of white students, and have randomly chosen all the black and brown students at those schools to be ‘screened.’”

  • @iHUNTcriminals@lemm.ee
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    101 year ago

    I’m always going to blame parents.

    Too many people have kids before they even understand how to take care of their own mind body and soul.

    • @Mamertine@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      That’s because access to birth control is restricted or never explained. It’s intentional to keep a poor class in society. IMO you’re not going back far enough with your blame.

      • @iHUNTcriminals@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Idk. If I don’t have money to raise a kid (or live my own life for that matter). I’m not going to have a kid birth control or not. It doesn’t really take education or birth control to understand you literally don’t have the means to have a child or even fund your own life. Dicks don’t accidentally find their way into vaginas.

        But yeah would be great if there weren’t people actively fighting sex Ed and contraception.

        And yeah poor people are in a situation where they are manipulated and held down. But that doesn’t force a dick into someone till a child’s born.

        (Don’t mean to come off a rash or anything, I just talk different/blunt, I mean no offence)

  • Neon
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    71 year ago

    i first thought they were talking about the Kubernetes-Tool lmao

  • @spaduf@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    71 year ago

    This is awful but not anything new as far as I’m aware. My high school had it and that was just a little under a decade ago. It’s easy to look at these things in the context of the rise of authoritarian strong-man politics and go “holy shit that’s horrible” but it’s important to remember that most of these horrifying new dystopian features of society are actually the result of the decades of fear-mongering about drugs, crime and terror.

    • Had them in the classroom? Our school would use them to sweep lockers occasionally. But it was when students were not near their lockers.

  • @Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works
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    61 year ago

    Texas has done this for years, I remember 10+ years ago being in middle school and they send k-9 in to sniff everyones backpacks.