A Bit of Rare Common Sense

Although it's exceedingly rare these days sometimes you do see a bit of common sense show itself in the courts. Back in 2014 Alyssa Drescher was expelled from school because she had forgotten about a small pocket knife in her purse. Over two years later the Minnesota Supreme Court has ruled that mere possession of a weapon (except for firearms because they're extra evil) is not enough to expel a student. For such a punishment to be delivered the school must also demonstrate that a student had malicious intent:

With school starting in many Minnesota districts Tuesday, administrators around the state are facing a new legal landscape. A Minnesota Supreme Court ruling will likely change the way administrators discipline students caught with weapons.

Under the court decision, schools will have to investigate the student's intent when weapons that aren't firearms show up in school.

This is the way it should always be. Weapons are inanimate objects and therefore their mere presence isn't dangerous. What makes a weapon dangerous is the intent of the user. A good person with a gun isn't a threat to anybody. An evil person is a just as much of a threat with a gun as with an automobile. Good people aren't going to hurt others and evil people will find a way to hurt others.

Until today all schools were under the tyranny of zero tolerance policies. I hope this court ruling is the first step in the complete eradication of zero tolerance.