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9:31 pm
December 27, 2011


key lime pie

posts 131

21

2:16 am
January 1, 2012


Amy33Amy33

Minnesota

posts 204

22

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45…..news-life/

 

Not an article that specifically has to do with youth, but has a few laws on the list that effect youth

–Amy

http://amy33amy33.tumblr.com/

http://youthrightsmn.tumblr.com/

-

(So what happens when people find out that I didn't show up to my own virtual party…)

-

Alright, Fireworks and Snowflakes, The First Annual Dance off for Youth Rights! A reminder that the deadline for the songs has been moved back to December 23rd and the deadline for letting me know that you want to dance off is still December 28th, though I wont reject dancers who let me know later. Email Your F&S Stuff to [email protected]

-

Next Informal Chat: 12/18/12, 8p-12m est - Next #16toVote: 12/16/12 – Next Chapter Chat: 1/17/13 – Next MN NYRA Meeting: ??/??/?? – Last time I updated: 12/10/12

-

I HAVE an EPIC CHAPTER in Minnesota! If you are interested, visit our Facebook! http://facebook.com/youthrightsmn

11:13 pm
January 21, 2012


OmegaWolf747

posts 2674

23

URL: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/he…..et-tattoo/

Title: Georgia Mom Arrested for Allowing 10-year-old to Get Tattoo

Date: 1/19/12

 

A Georgia mother who was arrested for allowing her 10-year-old to get a tattoo said she had no idea it was illegal for him to get one, even with her consent.

When Chuntera Napier’s son Gaquan Napier asked her if he could get a memorial tattoo for his 12-year-old brother Malik who died after being hit by a car, Napier was touched by the request.

“My son came to me and said, ‘Mom, I want to get a tattoo with Malik on it, rest in peace,’” she told ABC News’ Atlanta affiliate WSBTV. “It made me feel good to know that he wanted his brother on him.”

When Gaquan Napier was asked why he wanted the tattoo, he said, “Because it represents my brother.”

“What do I say to a child who wants to remember his brother? It’s not like he was asking me, ‘Can I get Sponge Bob?” Napier said. “He asked me [for] something that’s in remembrance of his brother. How can I say no?”

Gaquan got a tattoo on his right arm of his brother’s name and his former basketball jersey number. Napier also has memorial tattoos for her son on her right arm.

When someone at his school noticed the tattoo and contacted authorities, Napier was arrested on Tuesday and charged with misdemeanor cruelty and being a party to a crime, according to WSBTV. Napier bonded out of jail on Wednesday but is shocked that her consent was not enough for her son to get a tattoo.

“I always thought that if a parent gave consent, then it was fine,” she said. “How can somebody else say that it’s not okay? He’s my child, and I have the right to say what I want for my child. I can’t go tell anybody else what I want for their child.”

A Georgia law from 2010 states, “It shall be unlawful for any person to tattoo the body of any person under the age of 18, except a physician or osteopath.”

Police say that Napier has refused to cooperate in naming the tattoo artist who could also be prosecuted for violating the law.

Acworth Chief of Police Michael Wilkie told ABCNews.com in an emailed statement that the tattoo appeared “to be the work of an amateur” and said one police theory is that when Napier took the child to get a memorial tattoo similar to her own, she discovered it was illegal and took him somewhere where it could be done “illegally like a ‘jail house’ tattoo.”

“Unfortunately, the mother has elected not to cooperate with the police any further in this investigation,” Wilkie said. “The tragedy of this is that the child’s tattoos are some sort of memorial to a sibling who was lost in a car accident a few years ago. I understand from the investigators that there are several memorial to the deceased child in the apartment where they live. It may be that professional or religious counseling for their/her grief would be more helpful than anything.”

Freedom is a birth right, not a reward that must be earned.

dance "You gotta fight for your right to party!" dance

"They call us problem child. We spend our lives on trial. We walk an endless mile. We are the youth gone wild. We stand and we won't fall. We're the one and one for all. The writing's on the wall. We are the youth gone wild!" – Skid Row – Youth Gone Wild

"Barbarism is the natural state of mankind. Civilization is unnatural. It is a whim of circumstance. And barbarism must always ultimately triumph." – Beyond the Black River, by Robert E. Howard

3:28 pm
March 9, 2012


key lime pie

posts 131

24

MA legislators are moving to comply with Obama's agenda to increase the required school attendance age to 18.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/mass-pan…..01116.html

5:07 pm
March 15, 2012


OmegaWolf747

posts 2674

25

Title: Hundreds of Kids Arrested on an Unproven Hunch

URL: http://www.voiceofsandiego.org…..963f4.html

Date: March 11, 2012

Category: Curfews

 

In March 2010, as teenagers roamed City Heights' streets, a swarm of cops gathered at a nearby elementary school, checked their watches and prepared to strike.

At 10 p.m., the cops spilled across the neighborhood and arrested every minor violating the city's curfew law. When they ran out of handcuffs, police used plastic twisty ties.

Police trucked two boys walking down University Avenue back to the elementary school, a home base for the operation, and eventually released them to their parents. That night, 55 other kids followed in the same footsteps.

It was a typical curfew sweep in City Heights and part of a dramatic rise in curfew enforcement by the San Diego Police Department. Police began conducting regular sweeps in 2008 and have since expanded their use to much of the city's urban core.

In these neighborhoods alone, police have more than tripled curfew arrests in the last five years, forcing hundreds of more children to pay fines, participate in weeks-long diversion courses or fight police in court. And all of it's been done on an unproven hunch.

When pushed to justify the arrests, police and elected leaders have claimed the sweeps are responsible for a recent drop in crime. They cite isolated crime statistics or anecdotal stories, but never an analysis of whether the program has actually been effective. No analysis has ever been done.

Proponents have argued their program saves lives and prevents kids from becoming victims of violent crime. They've also argued it prevents kids from becoming perpetrators of crime by pulling them from a dangerous environment and educating them about the risks of staying out late.

But an analysis of juvenile crime statistics by voiceofsandiego.org challenges whether either of these claims are true. Neighborhoods without the sweeps have reported greater drops in crime in the last five years than those with them.

VOSD reached that surprising conclusion by examining the two metrics of juvenile crime often cited by the program's proponents: the number of violent crime victims and the number of juvenile arrests police made during curfew hours.

Where regular curfew sweeps have happened for at least the past two years, police reported a 47 percent decline in victims in the last five years. Where they haven't happened, police reported an additional 17 point decrease.

An analysis of felony arrests during curfew hours showed a similar trend. Neighborhoods with the sweeps reported substantially smaller drops in arrests than those without them.

We didn't compare just San Diego neighborhoods to each other. We looked at curfew enforcement here and the entire state. What we found: While police across the state have moved away from curfew enforcement, they've reported equal or greater drops in crime compared to San Diego.

We examined numerous ways that police track crime and adjusted our comparisons to make sure the trends we found weren't isolated. In every instance, the numbers raised questions about the effectiveness of the sweeps at reducing crime.

Proponents of the sweeps have been saying for years the program reduces juvenile crime. When provided our findings, police, residents and elected leaders stood behind the program but conceded the need for a closer inspection of its effectiveness.

"It's an eye-opener," said Marti Emerald, chairwoman of the City Council's public safety committee. "I want to talk to police and find out why crime is going down at a higher rate in other places."

Criminologists and law enforcement officials have pondered that basic question for decades and remain just as puzzled today. They often say poverty is responsible for more crime, but the strength of even that connection has been questioned recently.

Researchers widely believed that crime shared an inverse relationship with the economy. If people had more money, the theory suggested people would commit fewer crimes because they didn't need to steal or hurt others for survival.

But the nationwide economic collapse in 2008 threw a wrench in that idea. Though the economy tanked and unemployment spiked, crime continued to fall nationwide and in San Diego.

The Rise of Curfew Sweeps

File photo by Sam Hodgson
Two young girls watch a Scooby Doo cartoon projected on the wall of the Cherokee Point Elementary cafeteria after they are arrested during a March 2010 curfew sweep in City Heights.

 

During a City Council meeting two years ago, Councilman Todd Gloria called the curfew sweeps program "city government at our best." Aside from making neighborhoods safer, he touted them as a unique collaboration between police officers, school officials, social service providers and community volunteers.

During each sweep, cops flood entire neighborhoods and arrest children out past 10 p.m. Some kids may be suspected gang members, sex trafficking victims or runaways. Others may simply be leaving a store, walking home or playing soccer in a park when the squad car pulls up next to them.

All are driven to a detention area, usually a school or a church, and matched with their parents and social services. If eligible kids complete a four-to-six week diversion course, they can avoid a fine and clear their record.

Though residents and police officers in southeastern San Diego are credited with creating the collaborative program now used today, what initiated the idea appears to be a mystery.

Proponents often say the program started in response to the murder of two teenagers during curfew hours, but that incident happened four months after the first curfew sweep in the neighborhood.

Even Capt. Tony McElroy, who oversees the police division that developed the program, isn't sure where the idea came from. He only recalls a spike in gang violence in the summer of 2008 and the community scrambling to respond.

Somehow police got the idea to conduct regular curfew sweeps in coordination with social service providers and volunteers, and McElroy said police soon noticed a drop in assaults involving kids.

"For a while there we had no assaults on youth," McElroy said. "It was working for us."

Then tragedy struck in December 2008. Monique Palmer, 17, and Michael Taylor, 15, were gunned down after leaving a party in Valencia Park. Their murders rocked a community already struggling to overcome gang violence and hit close to McElroy's heart.

Palmer was a member of McElroy's youth advisory board. The captain knew Taylor through the teen's grandmother.

In the community, residents say the deaths rallied people around curfew sweeps because the incidents were an extreme example of the crimes they aimed to prevent and gave them an avenue to become more actively involved in policing their neighborhood.

"I wouldn't still be doing it if I didn't think it was helpful," McElroy said. "I don't know what's it's done for keeping our kids safe, but it's bringing people closer together."

'I Love That You're Looking'

File photo by Sam Hodgson
SDPD Lt. Natalie Stone checks the identification of a man in a parked car during a March 2010 curfew sweep in City Heights. The man was over 18, so Stone didn't arrest him for violating the city's curfew law.

 

When pushed to explain falling crime, San Diego's police and elected leaders have often cited the sweeps as a major factor. When provided the results of VOSD's analysis, they were quick to defend their program.

Asst. Police Chief Boyd Long, who oversees patrol operations, said he believes curfew sweeps deter crime and pointed to the reduction in juvenile victims in areas with them. Still, he acknowledged more analysis is needed.

"We are going to take a good hard look at it," Long said after reviewing our findings. "I love that you're looking at the numbers because I haven't."

Asked why the Police Department hasn't evaluated the impact of more than tripling curfew arrests in the last five years, Long responded, "That's a good question that I don't have an answer to."

City Council President Tony Young, who represents southeastern neighborhoods, said it's unfair to compare crime in his area and other communities because they don't have the same underlying issues, such as a decades-long history of gang violence.

Young argued southeastern San Diego needs additional efforts like curfew sweeps to make a dent in crime. He believes that without them, crime may have decreased by a smaller margin or increased.

"It might raise questions," Young said of our analysis. "I've learned it's dangerous to make decisions solely on numbers."

Dana Brown is a community youth organizer who has volunteered for almost every curfew sweep in City Heights. She similarly rejected any comparison between the area and others, saying they are demographically different.

"If you drive through La Jolla, it's a completely different feeling," Brown said. "That's apples and oranges. Maybe it's even apples and potatoes."

While Young and Brown both raise valid concerns about comparing neighborhoods, our analysis looked at much larger areas to minimize the impact of evaluating isolated populations.

Brown, for example, cited La Jolla as a stark contrast to City Heights. But the area where police conduct curfew sweeps also includes downtown neighborhoods, where many residents own upscale condos, and tony neighborhoods like Kensington and Talmadge.

Police also face gang problems outside the city's urban core. In the last five years, police reported more juvenile victims of violent crime in Mira Mesa and San Ysidro than nearly all other neighborhoods.

Both Young and Brown believe the curfew sweeps program has reduced crime, but Brown also said the program is worthwhile even if it hasn't. She said it's built positive relationships between residents and police.

Other proponents argued the program was still beneficial because it identified at-risk youth and connected them with social services they might not otherwise receive. Most youth arrested during curfew sweeps are referred to diversion programs instead of court, according to a sampling of statistics provided by police.

"I'm supportive of providing as much assistance to as many as possible," said Pastor Harry Cooper, who was chairman of the city's gang commission when it endorsed the program. "I don't know that it reduces crime, but it definitely increases support for an at-risk population."

Not everyone supports the program. Margaret Dooley-Sammuli of the American Civil Liberties Union questioned the long-term value of curfew sweeps. She said they can alienate youth and worsen an entire neighborhood's relationship with police.

Dooley-Sammuli worries that arresting kids for low-level offenses will implant a negative image of law enforcement. For some children, the curfew sweep may be their first time in handcuffs.

She's also concerned about the specific population police have chosen to target. They're not kids in Point Loma or Serra Mesa. They're mainly inner-city youth of varying ethnicities and socio-economic conditions who live in high-crime areas.

"The disproportionate criminalization of people of color and people living in poverty is very troubling," Dooley-Sammuli wrote in an email. "This can easily have the effect of criminalizing a whole generation of young people."

A Broader Look at Curfew Sweeps

File photo by Sam Hodgson
SDPD Officer Shelly Olson briefs community members about how they will operate the Cherokee Point Elementary cafeteria as a makeshift detention facility during a March 2010 curfew sweep in City Heights.

 

Dan Macallair, executive director of the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, studied the impact of curfew laws across California in 1999 and said our findings support the same conclusion he reached back then.

"The evidence on it, in terms of what it claims to do and what it actually does, is just not there," Macallair said. "If the goal is to reduce crime, they don't do that."

Most studies about curfew enforcement have compared crime between cities with and without curfew laws. Almost uniformly, these studies have found little-to-no evidence that curfews reduce crime.

However, a smaller body of recent research has focused on the impact of increased curfew enforcement like the program in San Diego. A 2005 study of crime in Dallas found greater enforcement had deterred gang violence and potentially had a greater impact in reducing crime victims. Federal law enforcement officials called the results promising, but not conclusive.

Dana Nurge is a professor of criminal justice at San Diego State University and has been a technical adviser to the city's gang commission. She's been observing the curfew sweeps program and for years has urged police to study whether it's worked.

Nurge said our analysis raises doubt about the program's impact but further research is needed. "They clearly need to evaluate this program," she said. "It's been needed from the get go and it hasn't happened."

Freedom is a birth right, not a reward that must be earned.

dance "You gotta fight for your right to party!" dance

"They call us problem child. We spend our lives on trial. We walk an endless mile. We are the youth gone wild. We stand and we won't fall. We're the one and one for all. The writing's on the wall. We are the youth gone wild!" – Skid Row – Youth Gone Wild

"Barbarism is the natural state of mankind. Civilization is unnatural. It is a whim of circumstance. And barbarism must always ultimately triumph." – Beyond the Black River, by Robert E. Howard

9:59 pm
March 15, 2012


wedway

posts 73

26

"I wouldn't still be doing it if I didn't think it was helpful," McElroy said. "I don't know what's it's done for keeping our kids safe, but it's bringing people closer together."

Translation: "Curfew laws may not serve their intended purpose of reducing crime, but it rallies an ageist community together through their mutual hatred for young people, and that's a good enough reason to me for keeping it."

Is he even aware of what he's saying, or is he so deeply consumed by his ageism that he is oblivious? How can people like this hold any position of power? bang-head

There's too much time to do nothing and too little time to do anything.

9:26 pm
March 27, 2012


Ashley

Twin Cities, MN

posts 53

27

Post edited 9:27 pm – March 27, 2012 by Ashley


A student is suspended for swearing on Twitter:

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/te…..32581.html

Letting go of anger at "the system" isn't a life skill-it's the lazy way out. The real skill is holding on and having the courage to do something about it even when the very adults you should be able to trust (parents, teachers, social group staff, psychologists, etc.) are demanding that you let go of it.

7:06 pm
March 29, 2012


Amy33Amy33

Minnesota

posts 204

28

–Amy

http://amy33amy33.tumblr.com/

http://youthrightsmn.tumblr.com/

-

(So what happens when people find out that I didn't show up to my own virtual party…)

-

Alright, Fireworks and Snowflakes, The First Annual Dance off for Youth Rights! A reminder that the deadline for the songs has been moved back to December 23rd and the deadline for letting me know that you want to dance off is still December 28th, though I wont reject dancers who let me know later. Email Your F&S Stuff to [email protected]

-

Next Informal Chat: 12/18/12, 8p-12m est - Next #16toVote: 12/16/12 – Next Chapter Chat: 1/17/13 – Next MN NYRA Meeting: ??/??/?? – Last time I updated: 12/10/12

-

I HAVE an EPIC CHAPTER in Minnesota! If you are interested, visit our Facebook! http://facebook.com/youthrightsmn

5:24 pm
March 30, 2012


Amy33Amy33

Minnesota

posts 204

29

–Amy

http://amy33amy33.tumblr.com/

http://youthrightsmn.tumblr.com/

-

(So what happens when people find out that I didn't show up to my own virtual party…)

-

Alright, Fireworks and Snowflakes, The First Annual Dance off for Youth Rights! A reminder that the deadline for the songs has been moved back to December 23rd and the deadline for letting me know that you want to dance off is still December 28th, though I wont reject dancers who let me know later. Email Your F&S Stuff to [email protected]

-

Next Informal Chat: 12/18/12, 8p-12m est - Next #16toVote: 12/16/12 – Next Chapter Chat: 1/17/13 – Next MN NYRA Meeting: ??/??/?? – Last time I updated: 12/10/12

-

I HAVE an EPIC CHAPTER in Minnesota! If you are interested, visit our Facebook! http://facebook.com/youthrightsmn

12:28 am
April 18, 2012


Ashley

Twin Cities, MN

posts 53

30

Letting go of anger at "the system" isn't a life skill-it's the lazy way out. The real skill is holding on and having the courage to do something about it even when the very adults you should be able to trust (parents, teachers, social group staff, psychologists, etc.) are demanding that you let go of it.

2:53 pm
April 19, 2012


Ralf

posts 2

31

Lisa Skidmore, mother of a kindergarten student at Southwest School in Washburn, Mo., is outraged after her daughter's teacher forced her to wrap a trash bag around herself and sit in her own diarrhea, KY3-TV reports.

"They didn't even bother trying to clean her up or anything," Skidmore told the station. "She still had poop, diarrhea poop, coming out the back, up her front, down her legs."

The girl's father was almost too upset to talk about the incident, but said that he'd likely face criminal charges had he been the one to leave her sitting in her own mess like that.

According to the station, the class had been told to use the restroom before the testing period, so the teacher made the 6-year-old sit in the mess for the duration of the test and during the 20 minutes it took for her mother to drive to the school with a change of clothes.

With the girls' parents pushing to make sure this never happens at the school again, Superintendent Bob Walker told KY3 that district officials "regret what happened."

In March, Gonja Wolf, a high school art teacher in San Diego, was placed under investigation after a 14-year-old female student accused her of forcing her to urinate in a bucket inside the classroom instead of taking a bathroom break.

The girl filed a claim for damages to person or property, claiming the teacher made her do that in the presence of male classmates, and then empty the bucket in the classroom sink.

In January, a 7th grader at Klein ISD in Houston, Texas, claimed he was forced to urinate in a plastic bottle after his teacher refused to allow him to use the restroom.

Despite the student's testimony that he was denied a bathroom break, he still faced one month in "an alternative campus" as punishment, the Houston Chronicle reported.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/…..aing-grid7|aim|dl7|sec1_lnk3%26pLid%3D153295

9:26 pm
April 24, 2012


Ashley

Twin Cities, MN

posts 53

32

Parents spy on their kids on Facebook. http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/te…..18608.html

Letting go of anger at "the system" isn't a life skill-it's the lazy way out. The real skill is holding on and having the courage to do something about it even when the very adults you should be able to trust (parents, teachers, social group staff, psychologists, etc.) are demanding that you let go of it.

10:21 pm
April 24, 2012


foxfire

posts 623

33

Ashley said:

Parents spy on their kids on Facebook. http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/te…..18608.html

Ugh! Another reminder of the insanely ageist bias so many reporters have.

"Don't feel too badly if you fall into the spying [parent] category, though. It turns out that parents do have good reason to worry— 21% of parents have found abusive or explicit messages on their teen's social profile."

No. Your teenaged child having sexy messages is NOT a good reason to snoop. It is another good reason to respect your son or daughter's privacy!

9:21 am
May 7, 2012


OmegaWolf747

posts 2674

34

URL: http://nibletz.com/2012/05/jac…..ongariety/

Title: Portland: We Interview 15 Year Old Founder Jackson Gariety

Date: 5/7/12

Category: Hero

 

Two weeks ago at one of the craziest Startup Weekends Yet, Startup Weekend #Portland, 15 year old Jackson Gariety made a big splash with his #startupHashTraffic. Gariety tells us that some of the judges were concerned that there wasn’t a sustainable business model yet, but overall there was buzz around this 15 year old and his abilities.

Startup founders are getting younger and younger. We heard the story over the weekend about a 13 year old who may have the secret recipe for a lollipop to stop hiccups. We also always hear stories about founders in their 20′s who had already become entrepreneurs in their teen years. 

Gariety is one of those entrepreneurs and founders. He took a short break from coding this past weekend to speak with nibletz.com here’s that interview:

So tell us briefly what is your #HashTraffic idea all about?
Well, the name isn’t set in stone, but to understand #HashTraffic you’ve first got to understand #hashtags. They originated on the popular networking website twitter.com when the very influential and now Google employee Chris Messina suggested that a ‘#’ pound symbol could be used to make the word #barcamp stand out in Twitter search. Barcamp is a lineup of free conferences where people give talks. In order to connect the people who go to #barcamp, Chris had the idea of making the word stand out in Twitter search. What he had done was create the first Twitter group. It took Twitter by storm and now Twitter has added support for hashtagged words by making them link directly to a Twitter search. By using the hsahtag #barcamp in a tweet, you’re putting yourself and your tweet in the barcamp ‘clique’. So if I see one tweet with #barcamp, I can click it and see a realtime list of what everyone on Twitter is saying about #barcamp also. It’s groups for Twitter, created by users themselves! Since then the protocol has extended to Instagram and Google+, but not really made its way onto content management systems or become very widely used, despite its popularity on Twitter.
#HashTraffic bridges the gap between #websites by utilizing hashtags. With our software, which comes in the form of a website script, WordPress plugin, Drupal plugin, etc. bloggers can use #hashtags in their posts just like they do on Twitter. I can write an article about my experience at Portland Barcamp, use the hashtag #pdxbarcamp in my post, and HashTraffic turns that word in my post into a clickable link that displays a realtime feed of other blog posts, forums, news articles, websites, or any other kind of media around the web that is hashtagged with #pdxbarcamp. It takes this booming web trend ready burst out of its cocoon and makes it an internet protocol to drive traffic around from blog to blog. Why would anyone want that? Because at the moment, our web experience is broken. We browse the web by searching Google, reading an article, then going back to Google again. It’s a fundamentally broken exercise. Why always go back to the hub when you could go from site to site. This is also an advantage to bloggers, since those who use the plugin on their site can drive traffic to it simply by using common tags. They can get more viewers on their blog or forum by putting themselves in a clique. Just like developers, designers and businessmen get attention in the startup world by attending events like #pdxbarcamp.
#HashTraffic bridges this gap on the web. It adds another dimension to the web experience.
Now tell us about you, we hear you’re still in high school but pretty talented
I’m currently attending Grant High School in northeast Portland. It’s a great place full of passionate teachers. Unfortunately we’re experiencing major budget cuts at the moment. Backing up a bit, I started with technology back in 2009 when I started writing a simple HTML site to host and sell my photography on. Then, the focus was first on the photos, second on the business, and third on the coding. Since then, my interests have done a complete 180 and I’m now coding every chance I get, trying to start a business around the technology, and I shoot photos for fun in my spare time. After I realized there’s no money in art itself (compare Justin Bieber to Miles Davis in terms of how much money they made), I tried to think of a way to make money off of a product where I could be artistic but also solve a problem in the world. I adopted the WordPress slogan “code is poetry” as my motto and trudged into the world of web development and entrepreneurship. The old photo site is gone, and in its place is http://jacksongariety.com/, a well-written chunk of HTML, CSS, JavaScript and PHP that shows my freelance web design, my web development blog and my photoblog.
More after the break
Is this your first startup idea? What other ideas have you had, what other things are you working on?
I try to constantly be doing something related to the internet. Part of that is always thinking of new ideas. Since Startup Weekend, I’ve worked with Colby Aley, the other 15 year old who pitched that weekend. We’re trying to put together a PHP tool that people can use to easily create an online scoreboard for sports events. It uses Twitter to crowdsource football games and basketball games and display score information in real time. It doesn’t really have any business potential, but it’s a really cool use of Twitter and #hashtags.
Do your parents support your endeavors?
For the most part, yes. They’re happy I can find something I love, do it well, and make money doing it, there’s no doubt about that. Though there’s always this worry, especially since I’ve gotten into the business aspect of technology, that I won’t finish high school or that my grades will slip. I value education far too much for that, but it’s hard to care about something/someone and not be concerned, so it makes sense to me when there’s a bit of tension during a talk about looking for investments to grow #HashTraffic.
Have you had any kind of formal training in computer science, coding, anything related to apps?
I have no formal training in computers at all. But not everyone needs it. Passion and artistic intuition drive success, so if you can get that in school, fantastic, but if it comes naturally to you, even better. Those who truly love business or photography or technology or anything at all will find themselves learning at every available opportunity. I’ve built apps of all kinds, from web apps to iPhone apps to mac apps. My strong point is most certainly the web, and I try to take it seriously. It’s easy to start coding and learn “pigeon code” just like any language, in or out of the computer world. I study programming by reading books and dissecting websites, and I strive to write the cleanest, most flexible and up-to-date code possible. This is important on the web, since everything is changing so fast.
At school I try to involve my passion with my teachers and peers as much as possible, but this has proven to be difficult. Grant has no classes that are geared towards understanding the internet or programming computers or design, and artistic classes such as music are being cut in favor of the more industrial classes like mathematics, science and english. I’m a firm believer that art of all forms is what drives success, and it saddens me to see how America’s education system, especially Portland, is getting the fuzzy end of the lollypop and having to cut classes rather then add them. The web is the fastest growing industry in the world, and students should be taught to use it and learn business in technology as it is invaluable to the future of America as a country.
Who are your tech world heroes?
Definitely Steve Jobs. He showed the world that technology was art, and I respect that more then anything. Also, Jack Dorsey. He straddles the fields of entrepreneur and developer so well it makes my head spin. Max Miedinger for creating the Helvetica font. Some people say it’s overused, I say it creates an elegant consistency throughout the world. After all, there’s a reason good designers don’t use a different font on every page of a book, that would be a high school yearbook. All of the Automattic team, pioneers of neue open source, creators of WordPress which powers something like 20% of the internet. Wieden+Kenney for creating a revolution in advertising. So many more inspirational people doing incredible things because they get that technology is art. Some of the earliest human technology was the trowel, used to dig ditches efficiently and grow crops. Someone had to invent that.
Did you enjoy participating in Portland’s Startupweekend?
What an incredible experience and community. The weekend was worth far more then its price-tag and an awesome staff of people put it together. I can only imagine how Startup Weekend will grow over the years as the Portland startup scene becomes more realistic.
Was it hard for you to stay up all weekend?
The weekend took a lot of energy out of me. It wasn’t so much the late hours as it was the constant communication with all sorts of people with incredible ideas to bring to the table. The weekend made me realize just how much effort it takes to organize all these ideas that people have, since so many want to contribute. People just passing buy our room saw developers sitting around tables and people talking about how to improve the pitch and they just want to stop in and help. I was either talking to someone or listening to someone for 54 hours straight trying to figure out which ideas were golden that could accelerate the project as fast as possible.
What was the judges feedback on HashTraffic?
The consensus was that we didn’t have a business model. We got a couple questions from the crowd and the judges, all were about revenue stream except for one question which showed our team that not everyone has a fundamental understanding of how Twitter works. But the business model question stuck, and we instantly got to work on a revenue model which we recently finished. It’s been a week, and over that time we think we’ve figured out how we can keep ads off of the product and still monetize it immediately.
How did you come up with this idea?
Browsing Facebook and watching as hundreds of high schoolers use #hashtags that don’t link anywhere. I realized that hashtags were more then a feature of Twitter. They were the natural pattern of how humans form groups and connect with each other. I saw visions of a new web protocol, one that doesn’t require an RSS reader app.
What are some of your other interests?
Aside from web development, business and photography, I participate in the Grant High School Ski Race Team during the winter. Part of my fascination with skiing ties into photography. I love being out in the mountains and discovering trails and skiing through quiet areas that aren’t constantly being bombarded with human activity. It’s magic up there in the mountains. SO I guess you could say my other interest is nature. I like to hollow out lightbulbs and plant small gardens inside of them and watch the plants grow out the bottom of the lightbulb. It’s that mixing of technology and nature that I find fascinating.
Are you continuing the development of Hashtraffic now that the contest is over?
Yes. I’m taking a break from coding right now to fill this out. There’s a lot I’d like to say about the development of the product that I won’t at this particular point in time, but we’re looking at rapid expansion of user base very soon and the rollout of a few new products in the lineup including a dashboard for web-masters and bloggers to analyze their hashtag use.
It’s hard for me since I’m in high school, but I work on the project after school and we’re looking for an investment to rent office space as well as developers.
What’s next on your plate?
Web, web, school, web, web, web, web… etc.
What’s your plan after high school?
After high school, depending on how far I can take HashTraffic in such a short period of time (I’m a sophomore now), I’d like to go to college for computer sciences in either the New York area of San Francisco Bay Area so I can be close to where tech startups are happening. And who knows where the next silicon valley will be. Things are moving from desktop computers and into the cloud and on mobile devices, so a new epicenter for startups could be anywhere in the next 15 years, who knows. If you want to know where I’ll be after high school, it’s wherever the next silicon valley is. Maybe that’s San Francisco, maybe it’s in another country, I’ll be there.
We installed the hash traffic plugin, see how it works by clicking any hashtag in our interview with HashTraffic founder Jackson Gariety
Linkage:
Nibletz is the voice of #startups “everywhere else” check out these new stories
We’re on a sneaker strapped nationwide road trip, check it out and support us here 

Freedom is a birth right, not a reward that must be earned.

dance "You gotta fight for your right to party!" dance

"They call us problem child. We spend our lives on trial. We walk an endless mile. We are the youth gone wild. We stand and we won't fall. We're the one and one for all. The writing's on the wall. We are the youth gone wild!" – Skid Row – Youth Gone Wild

"Barbarism is the natural state of mankind. Civilization is unnatural. It is a whim of circumstance. And barbarism must always ultimately triumph." – Beyond the Black River, by Robert E. Howard

8:58 am
June 4, 2012


Ralf

posts 2

35

Stop electric shocks on disabled students, ex-teacher's aide says

 

A former teacher’s aide who says he used electric shocks on teens with special needs to control behavior is demanding that state officials ban the practice at a Massachusetts school.

 

As of Friday afternoon, more than 228,000 people had joined an online campaign condemning the Judge Rotenberg Education Center in Canton, Mass., for administering electric shock treatments to its students with developmental disabilities.

 

Greg Miller said he launched the petition drive on Change.org last week after a 2002 video surfaced showing a Rotenberg student being shocked 31 times. 

“Support has been immense,” said Jonathan Perri, a senior campaigner at Change.org. “A lot of people from around the world have been signing the petition, watching the video. They can’t believe this is happening in Massachusetts.”

The Rotenberg center's unorthodox methods have been subject of lawsuits and media scrutiny, including an investigation by NBCNewYork.com, which first reported on the shock treatments in 2006. 

Rotenberg school officials have said that the electric shock treatments are approved by physicians and that parents are involved in the care of their children.

A receptionist answering calls at the Rotenberg center said she would refer messages from msnbc.com to a publicist handling media inquires. Separate telephone calls to the media representative went unanswered.

 

In the video showing him being shocked repeatedly, then-18-year-old Andre McCollins begs for relief. Miller said he worked at the center from 2003 and 2006, and during that time, he administered electric shocks to students with disabilities “so many times, I lost count.”

 

The student's mother, Cheryl McCollins of New York, sued the school, alleging malpractice. During court proceedings, the judge allowed the video to be played as evidence, according to NBC News. A settlement was announced April 24, but its terms were not disclosed.

 

Since then, the video has been prominently displayed on Miller's page on Change.org, a popular website for social activism.

Miller said he has not met Andre McCollins, but Cheryl McCollins, who now lives in New York, was the first to sign Miller's petition. She wrote:

My son Andre McCollins was subjected to this torture at JRC. As a parent, I was not prepared for the inhumane manner in which they treated people. I expected logic and some form of reason to be applied to the students in addressing behaviors that were considered inappropriate. Parents are not told "corrective measures" particularly a painful shock is applied without any warning or concern for what triggered the targeted behavior. What was dangerous about keeping his coat on. THIS INSANITY HAS TO STOP.

'Bee sting'
In a video on the school's website, Matthew Israel, the school's former executive director, describes the use of the electric shock method, likening the procedure as the equivalent of a bee sting.

 

“It's not a bee sting. It is inhumane and it is torture,” Miller told msnbc.com.

According to Miller, students at the center wear electrodes on their bodies that are attached to a small device carried around in a staff member’s fanny pack. When the student acts out or violates a behavior, a staff member administers a shock, he said. A student could receive up to 30 shocks for a number of offenses, including standing up from a chair without permission, he said.

“I want to put an end to this practice all together in Massachusetts and help these students,” Miller said. “Not only should the school stop shocking students, Massachusetts legislators should ban the use of shocks altogether.” 

'Extraordinarily disturbing'
On Wednesday, Cheryl McCollins and Miller hand-delivered boxes of petitions to Massachusetts lawmakers, including Democratic House Speaker Robert DeLeo. Attempts by msnbc.com to reach McCollins for comment was unsuccessful.

State Sen. Brian Joyce, a Democrat from Milton, Mass., criticized the state for allowing the practice to continue. “It is extraordinarily disturbing and only strengthens my resolve to stop this barbaric practice that takes place in my district,’’ Joyce said in a statement on his website.

 

Read more: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_n…..-says?lite

2:02 pm
June 28, 2012


OmegaWolf747

posts 2674

36
URL: http://www.nbcwashington.com/n…..41335.html

Category: Youth hero

Heroic Teens Help Evacuate Burning Reston Condo Complex

3-alarm fire extinguished overnight

Tuesday, Jun 26, 2012  |  Updated 5:37 PM EDT

A huge, overnight fire at a condo building in Fairfax County didn't scare off a group of teenagers. They courageously jumped into action and helped people get out, neighbors said.

Trey Brown, 17, was skateboarding with a couple of friends about 1 a.m. when the three-alarm fire in the 4100 block of Gate Hill Place in Reston, Va., started.

“We thought it was fireworks at first,” he said.

He and his friends joined Tamara Newman, a resident of the complex, in going door-to-door to urge people to get out of their condos. Together they rescued an elderly woman and a woman who doesn’t speak much English, Newman told News4’s Erika Gonzalez.

“We should probably put those kids up for an award,” Fairfax County Fire Capt. Willie Bailey said. “They probably saved some lives tonight.”

About 100 firefighters spent about two hours extinguishing the fire.

One person suffered minor injuries.

Nine of the 18 units in the building were damaged, displacing almost 20 residents. The fire department says. Five units sustained heavy damage, and four others had moderate damage, the fire department told the Associated Press. Damages are estimated at $1 million.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Freedom is a birth right, not a reward that must be earned.

dance "You gotta fight for your right to party!" dance

"They call us problem child. We spend our lives on trial. We walk an endless mile. We are the youth gone wild. We stand and we won't fall. We're the one and one for all. The writing's on the wall. We are the youth gone wild!" – Skid Row – Youth Gone Wild

"Barbarism is the natural state of mankind. Civilization is unnatural. It is a whim of circumstance. And barbarism must always ultimately triumph." – Beyond the Black River, by Robert E. Howard

9:55 pm
June 28, 2012


wedway

posts 73

37

OmegaWolf747 said:

URL: http://www.nbcwashington.com/n…..41335.html
Category: Youth hero

Heroic Teens Help Evacuate Burning Reston Condo Complex

3-alarm fire extinguished overnight

Tuesday, Jun 26, 2012  |  Updated 5:37 PM EDT

A huge, overnight fire at a condo building in Fairfax County didn't scare off a group of teenagers. They courageously jumped into action and helped people get out, neighbors said.

Trey Brown, 17, was skateboarding with a couple of friends about 1 a.m. when the three-alarm fire in the 4100 block of Gate Hill Place in Reston, Va., started.

“We thought it was fireworks at first,” he said.

He and his friends joined Tamara Newman, a resident of the complex, in going door-to-door to urge people to get out of their condos. Together they rescued an elderly woman and a woman who doesn’t speak much English, Newman told News4’s Erika Gonzalez.

“We should probably put those kids up for an award,” Fairfax County Fire Capt. Willie Bailey said. “They probably saved some lives tonight.”

About 100 firefighters spent about two hours extinguishing the fire.

One person suffered minor injuries.

Nine of the 18 units in the building were damaged, displacing almost 20 residents. The fire department says. Five units sustained heavy damage, and four others had moderate damage, the fire department told the Associated Press. Damages are estimated at $1 million.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

I feel like if most adults saw some young people skateboarding at one o'clock in the morning, they would label them as punks who couldn't be up to any good. Those people should read this story and learn to not be so quick to judge. roll-eyes

Just think, if that town had a youth curfew, then these coincidentally young individuals wouldn't have been able to save anyone. They would have been too busy stuck under house arrest without fair cause.

There's too much time to do nothing and too little time to do anything.

12:03 pm
July 4, 2012


key lime pie

posts 131

38

URL:  Delaware Law to Give Students Increased Online Privacy

Category: Student Rights

 

Delaware Law to Give Students Increased Online Privacy

July 3, 2012 by

 

Delaware has become the first state to passed a law banning public and private schools from requiring students to give administration access to social media accounts.

The bill forbids institutions from requesting students to provide passwords or account information, asking students to log onto a social media site in the presence of a government agent, requiring the installation of a monitoring device that gives the institution access, or requiring students to add an agent to their online contacts.

The bill — which still needs the governor’s signature to be fully enacted — is a significant move in the long-standing fight for digital privacy, say its advocates.

“Since schools generally do not have a duty to monitor their students’ off campus activities in the real world, they shouldn’t have a duty to monitor their students’ off campus digital activities,” Bradley Shear — the attorney who helped draft the social media law — told the Los Angeles Times.

Shear said he believes schools and employers who require access to social media accounts are in violation of the First Amendment. In turn though, universities and colleges will have a legal liability shield to claims that they must protect or monitor students from any dangerous actions taken on social media sites.

Other states are debating similar sanctions. California’s bill on student’s social media privacy recently moved to the Assembly Committee on Higher Education and Maryland passed a social media privacy law in the Senate, but it stalled soon after.

The Delaware bill was voted through House without dissent, and passed unanimously in the state Senate.

Do you think schools should be allowed to access to students’ social media accounts? Tell us your opinion in the comments.

3:04 pm
July 28, 2012


Tengu

posts 1764

39

Dark Side of a Bain Success – details Aspen Educational Group and those profiting from the abuse.

 

http://www.salon.com/2012/07/1…..n_success/

Rev. Adam Zarnowski

Former Board Member

 

For the love of God people, QUOTE THE TEXT OF ANY ARTICLE YOU POST FOR THOSE OF US WHO NEED TO REFERENCE IT LATER ON FOR RESEARCH PURPOSES.

 

"Well, I guess that answers the age-old question, "What do Adam Z. and Pikachu have in common?" They both give people seizures. Also, they both can store electricity in their cheeks and release it in lightning-based attacks." - Ken

12:18 pm
November 18, 2012


Amy33Amy33

Minnesota

posts 204

40

–Amy

http://amy33amy33.tumblr.com/

http://youthrightsmn.tumblr.com/

-

(So what happens when people find out that I didn't show up to my own virtual party…)

-

Alright, Fireworks and Snowflakes, The First Annual Dance off for Youth Rights! A reminder that the deadline for the songs has been moved back to December 23rd and the deadline for letting me know that you want to dance off is still December 28th, though I wont reject dancers who let me know later. Email Your F&S Stuff to [email protected]

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Next Informal Chat: 12/18/12, 8p-12m est - Next #16toVote: 12/16/12 – Next Chapter Chat: 1/17/13 – Next MN NYRA Meeting: ??/??/?? – Last time I updated: 12/10/12

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I HAVE an EPIC CHAPTER in Minnesota! If you are interested, visit our Facebook! http://facebook.com/youthrightsmn

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