This source does not say how old the 80 or so students were, but I get the impression they were at least mostly male, and probably teenagers. They were forced to do hundreds of them, in some cases on 3 successive days, and many temporarily lost the use of their arms and some were even hospitalized with kidney failure, which can result from a combination of dehydration and muscle damage.
Where does anyone get the idea that doing this to kids is a good idea, anyway? This was in San Angelo, TX.
My dance instructor allowed no tears or complaints. Screamed every day.
I was on a senior elite team about to go audition for a dance scholarship when I quit thinking of her as a tyrant.
I get still get a twinge if I hear something that reminds me.
This reminded me.
Of course the school is culpable. The coaches should be arrested as soon as they’re found.
That’s a bunch of counts of criminal child abuse.
OTOH…why didn’t the parent notice the kid at dinner that first night and ask “what’s your trouble son?”
I would have noticed. At least some of the 150 or so parents surely noticed.
What’s that story?
Was this Charter school a college prep or athletics focused school?
Difficult to get in and stay in, I’ll grant.
Still I hope the parents succeed in winning the lawsuit. This kinda bullshit needs to stop.
The pretext for this mass punishment? “A jersey mix-up,” the lawsuit claims. “Two students had been assigned the same jersey number—an error caused by the coaches themselves. Rather than correct their own mistake, the coaches decided to punish eighty children for it. This was not discipline. This was not training. This was collective torture inflicted on children by adults who operated without oversight, without accountability, and without a shred of human decency.”
The athletic director and head football appear to have been fired pretty quickly:
Yeah, a kid comes home from school and can’t feed or dress themselves? One wonders if things like this had been done to them before, although not to these extremes.
I must say, I normally have a small amount of concern, that when a public school is sued, they money may at some level come out of the pockets of the teachers or education, if in nothing else increased insurance, legal expenses, and image remediation.
When it comes to Charter Schools, especially TEXAS charter schools… I find no such issues impinging my conscience.
A lot of people over the years have pushed ideas like “tough love” and “suffering and adversity makes you stronger”, which can easily hurt or kill people . Especially kids, who are in no position to fight back or escape.
These aren’t people, these are football coaches. Texas football coaches. They never gave a thought about kids lifting their arms because their knuckles always drag across the ground in the first place.
“Drop and give me twenty” is a stereotypical command uttered by a drill sergeant to the recruits he is training. But if a sergeant did anything like this to a private, I’d bet that he would be court-martialed.
My Daddy was a Marine DI for many years.
He could do a great imitation of Sgt.Carter(?) from Gomer Pyle, USMC.
Screaming, red faced.
Really though he told me the DI growl and popping off orders was their only weapon. By the time he was a DI no physical corporal punishment was done. (I wasn’t there, but I am sure some happened).
He would be appalled at these coaches.
I don’t remember him coddling my brother’s in their highschool athletic aspirations. I think a certain amount of pain would be expected.
Oh, and about Texas and Friday night football. Yep. Katie bar the door. They are ridiculous about it. Now it seems they’re criminal about it.
Actually, rhabdomyolysis and potential kidney damage are a known consequence of excessive physical activity (notably, pushups) on the high school level in Texas, though it’s happened elsewhere too.
Just as cruelly stupid is denying kids/athletes water breaks to punsh or “toughen them up”. Dehydration can lead to serious consequences or death, but some numbnuts coaches still haven’t learned that lesson. Case in point: the new head coach of the University of Kentucky football team, Will Stein, was in the news recently for running drills that, unlike in the past, don’t include water breaks.
We read sometimes of ancient religions that practiced human sacrifice of children, and wonder how anyone could have done that. And yet, even today, the dominant religion in many parts of this country is based on child sacrifice.
There’s some people out there that have a really twisted sense of what “survival of the fittest” means. To them, if upon imposing hardship someone dies or is crippled then all the better, it means the survivors who could stand the brutality are the “superior” breed who deserve to get ahead.
“Because of the pending litigation, as well as HIPAA, FERPA, and employment law considerations, we are unable to comment on the specifics of the allegations.
I am curious how they could claim HIPAA protections to sharing information. FERPA makes more sense.