Pubdate: Wed, 7 May 2008 Source: Harbour City Star (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/harbourcitystar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4046 Author: Naomi Lakritz PRIVACY TAKEN MUCH TOO FAR Hey kids, guess what? Now you can keep drugs in your locker at school and nobody can stop you. Not the police, the teachers, or mom and dad. It's all thanks to the Supreme Court, that august body that hands down weighty -- and hopefully wise -- decisions. The court's recent ruling ordering drug-sniffing dogs to keep their noses out of school lockers was certainly weighty, but it wasn't wise. It came down on the side of individualism, a philosophy tailor-made for teenage narcissism, instead of on the side of the community's collective good. It is not in the collective good to open the door for more people to carry drugs on their persons without fear of repercussion and it is certainly not good for society or for students when high school lockers are deemed sacrosanct places, off-limits to random drug searches. The kids must be laughing all the way to their next drug deal. The Supreme Court's ruling centred on two cases -- one of a bus passenger who was apprehended after a drug-sniffing dog detected cocaine in his luggage six years ago in Calgary, the other of a Sarnia, Ont. high school whose principal had police dogs come in to sniff lockers for drugs. Silly principal -- trying to maintain zero tolerance policies about drugs at his school. Well, the judges sure showed him. He'll just have to join all the other adults who've thrown up their hands at trying to keep a lid on a variety of adolescent antics and let the kids rule. According to the court, these defendants have had their constitutional rights violated. Tsk, tsk. But what about other rights? Like the right of law-abiding society to expect that walking around with large amounts of cocaine or other illicit drugs remains a taboo and does not become the norm? Or the right of parents and teachers to expect that certain rules apply in schools, which are after all intended to be institutions of learning, not of drug-dealing? The entire ruling is troubling, but the part about school lockers is doubly so. It further reinforces an ubiquitous sense of entitlement. When they're little, they're told they're special and wonderful without ever doing anything to earn such accolades. When they're older, they learn the Supreme Court has sanctioned their desire to thumb their noses with impunity at adult authority and say, "Nyah, nyah, you can't touch me. I can do anything I please." And if what they please is to keep drugs in their lockers, they're now free to do so in peace. What kind of adults are being gestated for this do-as-you-please anarchical society of the future? More questions for the court: When do kids learn they're supposed to conform to certain societal standards? When do they learn they can't do just as they like and actions have consequences? To borrow the wonderfully succinct title of one of Holocaust survivor Primo Levi's most famous books: If not now, when? The court's ruling should have parents fuming for another reason -- schools are public places funded by taxpayers' money. Lockers are not students' private property. Technically, they belong to the taxpayer whose clout is sadly eroded by rulings that in essence allow drugs on taxpayer-funded property. Surprising that while the court was busy making rulings on dogs sniffing, they didn't also outlaw dogs sniffing people's crotches. Now there's an invasion of privacy, if ever there was one. Sounds dumb, doesn't it? Almost as dumb as shifting the weight of the scales of justice in favour of druggies and against preserving law and order. Privacy concerns are supposed to be balanced off with the bigger picture. Take the case of Ryan Schallenberger, 18, of Chesterfield, S. C. His parents turned him in to police recently after the postman left a delivery notice in their mailbox -- 10 pounds of ammonium nitrate he'd ordered was waiting for pick-up. Didn't Schallenberger have a constitutional right to order stuff to make a bomb? Thank goodness his parents didn't think so. You have to wonder what the Supreme Court of Canada would have thought of that, if Schallenberger had lived in this country. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake