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Take the FBI's Geek Profile Test

Posted by JonKatz on Mon Nov 29, 1999 09:07 AM
from the if-you-are-reading-this-you-may-be-dangerous dept.
Thanks to the miracle of e-mail and a few administrators outraged at the latest law enforcement intrusion into American schools, we present below the FBI's Geek Profile, the agency's secret checklist of potentially violent characteristics being distributed to educational institutions in the United States and Canada. I'm turning myself in.

Do you have above average intelligence? Are you sometimes a loner, a part of a small circle of friends perceived as outsiders?

Do you have "unstable" self-esteem? Are you fascinated by cults, weapons, games with themes of violence and death?

Do you come from a dysfunctional home? Resent authority? Reject criticism?

If the answer to most or all of the above is yes, then congratulations and welcome to the FBI's Geek Profile, its checklist of dangerous or potentially violent characteristics in school children.

In recent weeks this psychological "tool," polished by the FBI and other agencies and now being distributed to a school near you, has been creeping across the country.

Federal and local law enforcement authorities have used this sort of profiling for years to spot potential assassins, criminals and terrorists.

Now, following a small number of horrific school shootings, it's being made available to educators in the United States and, according to a number of northern e-mailers, Canada as well.

And it's not alone out there. Last month, the federal government announced that Mosaic-2000, a computer profiling system developed by the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (AFT) Division and a private celebrity - security agency, was being deployed to 30 or more U.S. schools to "target potentially dangerous people."

Neither federal nor school officials have said how this material will be stored, or to whom it might be made available. Nor is it clear whether students will be made aware of the fact that they are being labeled potential murderers, or whether they and their parents will have any opportunity to respond.

Such geek -profiling tools are increasingly popular despite the fact that the violent crime rate among kids in America has been plunging for years and is virtually non-existent in Canada.

This doesn't seem to bother educators much, perhaps because even if there isn't much violence to contain, geek profiling is proving an invaluable tool against rebellious, offensive, individualistic and outspoken students. Many participate in Net and Web culture, where they have vastly more freedom and creative experience than in schools, and who report the goal of this war on the non-normal isn't safety, but conformity and silence.

But why be deterred by truth or logic? Since the Columbine shootings in Colorado last year, students at American schools have reported an epidemic of suspensions, expulsions and forced counseling sessions for various offenses: wearing "inappropriate" clothing like trenchcoats or Goth make up, playing computer games like "Quake" and "Doom," spending too much time online, responding honestly to questions about whether they like school, making what administrators consider threats against classmates or teachers.

This week, more than a dozen principals, administrators and geeks e-mailed me a chunk of the FBI report circulating through U.S. and Canadian schools, purporting to detail some of the characteristics of "potentially violent" kids.

"Your term 'geek profiling' is dead on," wrote one principal. "The kids we are all beginning to look at are those that play violent video games, who are on the Internet all the time, and who don't participate in 'mainstream' school activities. Or who are seriously disenchanted with school or the structure of school. Of course, now, we can just label them as psychos rather than listen to what they say. But I can tell you, kids who spent a lot of time on the Net or playing computer games are prime suspects for evaluation and observation. Because we all know what they can get their hands on."

Here are the specific FBI characteristics, according to several principals. Potentially violent or dangerous students are:


Usually boys of average or above-average intelligence.
Often loners, or have small circle of friend who are outsiders.
Experience unstable self-esteem.
Often fascinated by cults, Satanism, weapons, themes of violence and death.
Experience a decline in schoolwork and marks.
Come from dysfunctional homes.
Have experience with chronic bullying and drug use.
Engage in attention-seeking behavior, and don't accept criticism.

In addition to the e-mail sent by disturbed principals and guidance counselors ("there's a fine line between bright and unhappy adolescents and mass-murderers," e-mailed one counselor. "I don't see it spelled out it in this FBI profile.") the FBI's "geek profile" was outlined to a Halifax, Nova Scotia newspaper (http://www.hfxnews.southam.ca/NatStory3.html) by an official of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

The FBI's checklist is as revealing for what it doesn't say as for what it does. Bullies and predators who prey on kids who are different or "non-normal" aren't considered dangerous, nor are teachers and educators who preside over uncreative, hostile and, to many kids, suffocating classroom environments.

No group of students, parents or citizens anywhere in the United States had been given an opportunity to vote - or even comment -- on the practice of injecting federal law enforcement investigative tools designed for responding to the most serious imaginable crimes committed by adults into daily classroom life.

Kids who call themselves geeks and nerds vary widely in social skills, emotional characteristics and family and class background. But many have experienced differing degrees of boredom, alienation, and experiences with bullying. They may like forms of gaming that might be branded violent. Many are often seen as loners, or rely on small circles of friends who share their culture.

Now they may have to deal with the suggestion that they're potential killers as well. It's possible - though statistically just barely - that some of these kids will turn violent and hurt themselves or their classmates.

But what's certain is that in the wake of the Columbine killings, they are the targets of ignorant and unfounded hysteria from the very people who are supposed to be protecting them, with the willing co-operation of those who are supposed to be educating them.

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  • Geek Testing for fun and profit? by DGMage (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:12AM
  • Dangerous as an Adult! by maroberts (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:13AM
  • Bullying by Adam Da Man (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:15AM
  • This sounds too much like facism.. by xtal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:17AM
  • Bullying by CaseyB (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:18AM
  • Mosaic up North (Score:4)

    by DanaL (66515) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:19AM (#1497008)
    I heard in the news a week or two ago that Mosaic 2000 is being presented to some school officials in Canada (in the Toronto area IIRC).

    I'll be interested to see what is done with the results from these profiles, once someone is labeled a pontential killer, I wonder what they will do with them. Force them to become jocks?

    Incidently, there has been a few incidents of school violence up here recently. One shooting incident in Canada that made the national headline. A little while after Columbine, a kid in Alberta shot 2 of his classmates. More recently, in TO, there have been a couple of kids beaten (one to death). Another gang-beating in BC last year and 1 kid stabbed over a box of Pokemon cards a month or so ago in Montreal. That's about half a dozen deaths, probably way less than the number killed in car accidents. Haven't seen any Bad Driver profiling being proposed!

    Dana
  • Well, that's me. (Score:5)

    by Amphigory (2375) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:19AM (#1497009) Homepage
    I was fascinated with cults and the occult. I was beaten at home. My family was highly disfunctional and I still, ten years later, seek counseling. I was a geek, a nerd. Whatever. I was bullied at school.

    And I was dangerous. That's right: I spent most of my high school years with a tenuous grasp of "killing people is just wrong" being the only thing that kept me from blowing the join up. I knew how. I had explosives. I had no reason to love anyone. All I had was a vague realization that there was a supreme morality and if I 'killed them all' as I wanted to I would have just reduced myself to their level.

    The problem is not the profiling: that's normal prudence. I desperately wish that someone had realized just how dark my world was and tried to help. I wish they would have locked me up in a mental institution and some of what was going on in my home would have come out. But it didn't. And I still pay the price in emotional anguish. I wish there had been a chaplain in my high school instead of a "guidance counselor". I wish someone had loved me enough to intervene.

    But no one did.

    Bottom line is that I have no problem with this "profiling" you whine about Jon. But I wish they would concentrate more on what to do with the kids once they find them. It comes down to love. And no one in our society is ready to make that kind of commitment.

  • by meckardt (113120) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:21AM (#1497010) Homepage
    We should all thank the FBI for providing educators with such a valuable tool for identifying that 1 in a million kid who will kill his classmates. Now, we can throw him in jail before he perpetrates his deed.

    Oh, we can tell which one of the million kids is really the potential killer? Let's treat them all like potential killers, just to make sure!

    Mike Eckardt [geocities.com] meckardt@yahoo.spam.com
  • I'm safe by cloudmaster (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:21AM
  • What's actually quite intersting is that... by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:21AM
  • hey wait by TheCodeMaster (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:22AM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by Nik Picker (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:22AM
  • Oh my. (Score:3)

    by Mandoric (55703) <mandoric@sover.net> on Monday November 29 1999, @04:22AM (#1497015) Homepage
    >>Usually boys of average or above-average intelligence.
    Check.
    >> Often loners, or have small circle of friend who are outsiders.
    Not only that, but I know them over the 'net.
    >> Experience unstable self-esteem.
    Yep... Been there, done, that, and hate myself for it half of the time. ^_^
    >> Often fascinated by cults, Satanism, weapons, themes of violence and death.
    Well EXCUSE ME for being into swords. =p
    >> Experience a decline in schoolwork and marks.
    *nodnod*
    >> Come from dysfunctional homes.
    Dunno if _dysfunctional_, but it sucks.
    >> Have experience with chronic bullying and drug use.
    *Not drug use, but has been mocked derisively for years*
    >> Engage in attention-seeking behavior, and don't accept criticism.
    Lemme see here... I'm posting this long thing about myself, and I'll probably post an angry reply if someone flames me. =p

    Maybe this is why they were so freaked out the called the FBI and expelled me just because I said "remember... may 15..." a few times. =p
  • Do we deserve this? by Bill the Cat (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:23AM
  • Hmm, let's innocent... by God I hate mornings (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:23AM
  • Typical by locrian (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:23AM
  • Twilight Zone to come true? by SpiceWare (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:23AM
  • by merky1 (83978) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:24AM (#1497021) Journal
    There needs to be a "If you answered no to all of these questions just because you don't want to be carted away" type of question. Anyone serious enough to want to kill would have no problem skirting this 'test'.

    I personally like going for the Charles Manson profile.
  • Genetic Pre-disposition by OtterpopX11 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM
  • Something's fishy here... by miscellaneous (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM
  • by rde (17364) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM (#1497025)
    But I can tell you, kids who spent a lot of time on the Net or playing computer games are prime suspects for evaluation and observation. Because we all know what they can get their hands on.
    Yeah, there's some nasty stuff out there. Anyone with a web connection can have their mind polluted by such pernicious crap as...

    Thoreau's Walden

    The complete works of Shakespeare

    Pretty much all of the surviving philosophical writings of the ancient Greeks

    Government legislation, bills being prepared, what congress has to say every day...
    I could go on all day, but I'm sure you get the point.

  • I'm amazed by Camelot (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM
  • That says it all really..... by dr_labrat (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM
  • Re:hey wait by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by oren (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25AM
  • Don't blame the educators.. by swdunlop (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:26AM
  • Steps to fight back by The G (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:26AM
  • Self Esteem by CaseyB (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:27AM
  • The complete uselesseness of profiling by mumblepig (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:28AM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:28AM
  • Depends on how this information is being used... by MurrayTodd (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:30AM
  • Scape Goats by SilverFate (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:30AM
  • Re:Bullying by dufke (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:30AM
  • It makes me sad by Ethan (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:30AM
  • I would say... by jd (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:31AM
  • Re:I'm amazed by radja (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:32AM
  • Useless tests are hype. by Rotten (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:33AM
  • Labeling the wrong people by _LORAX_ (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:33AM
  • Re:Oh my. by CYberPhreak (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:34AM
  • Re:Bullying by crivens (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:35AM
  • Soemthing New? by infodragon (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:36AM
  • by Rabbins (70965) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:37AM (#1497048) Homepage
    I would just like to point out that violent juvenile crime is down about 30% since 1994. In fact, this is the 12th straight year it has declined.

    This is a statistic by the Justice Department which tracks murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault.

    Also, firearm deaths in general are down more than 21% from 1993

    Now, the crimes are just receiving a lot more attention and sensationalism.

    Pisses me off when I hear all "These kids are unbelievable nowadays" attitudes. There are just more of them... bound to be bad apples in the mix.
  • Re:Bullying by slashdot-terminal (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:37AM
  • Lawrence Peter would find this interesting. by Captain Sarcastic (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:38AM
  • So... now what? by X-ViRGE (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:38AM
  • No surprise by Chilli (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:39AM
  • Re:Bullying by dufke (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:39AM
  • Comments on the "areas" by Saige (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:39AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Trebonius (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:40AM
  • Slappy JoJo by adimarco (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:41AM
  • It's the school officials... by QuasEye (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:42AM
  • Public Misconception... by Panamon777 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:44AM
  • by Enoch Root (57473) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:44AM (#1497062)
    Here are the three symptoms in childhood that allow profilers to detect potential serial killers:

    Mutilation and/or torture of small animals (frogs, etc.)

    Pyromaniac tendencies (likes to play with fire and burn things)

    Wet one's bed until an advanced age of childhood

    Wonder how many /.ers that fit?

    My point? Katz is kicking the bee's nest that is Slashdot to gather outrage. The fact of the matter is, this is not geeks he is talking about. He's talking about that bastard in highschool who collected knives and beat every kid around. He's talking about the guy who took it out on everyone else because his father beat the living shit out of him back home.

    Sure, that can be some geeks. But it's not the profile of all geek. Where's the love for science? Where's the obsession for details?

    Besides, it's ok to profile potential troublemakers. You indeed want to stop one kid from going to school and gunning down everyone, so the best way to go about this is to explain to teachers what's at stake; to give them an understanding that some people need support and help, and to be there for them if they need it, should they ask for it. What's wrong with that?

    Trouble is, like I said, geeks are not the target here. And the geeks, who seem to suffer a major social stigmata while younger, go about their lives without help just because they don't kill everyone in sight. Well, not most of the times, anyway. We're just bullied, we don't bully others. We all dream of slaughtering someone at some point in our lives, but there's a nagging something that keeps us from doing it. As we grow up, we realise it's ethics.

    "The wages of sin is death but so is the salary of virtue, and at least the evil get to go home early on Fridays."

  • Re:Twilight Zone to come true? by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:45AM
  • where is thomas jefferson when you need him? by skepticphilosopher (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:46AM
  • Self-Fullfilling Prophecy? by DJStealth (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:46AM
  • Individuals With Disabilities Act VIOLATION!!! by mattz (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:47AM
  • I guess I better get going. by evileye (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:48AM
  • Re:Hmm by Powers (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:48AM
  • Re:Typical by bubbasatan (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:49AM
  • Re: guidance counselors by Pfhreakaz0id (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:50AM
  • A few comments... (Score:3)

    by tweek (18111) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:50AM (#1497074) Homepage Journal
    On a few points:

    "Your term 'geek profiling' is dead on," wrote one principal. ...., and who don't participate in 'mainstream' school activities.

    Since when does lack of participation deem someone a target? I knew alot of people who didn't enjoy the mainstream school activities when I was in highschool. I participated in a few (french honors, prom committies) but hte rest I found to be uninteresting. Most people know I'm a network admin for a Quality Assurance Lab. Recently Rational (a testing tool company) came in and did a week long course on their products. At the end everyone got certificates. I was the only person in the entire office who didn't attend (other than the boss). My boss asked me if I wanted to go and I flat out said that I had nor will I ever have any interest in manual, automated or regression testing. I told him that I see no link between it and my job other than the performance testing that users were doing on our LAN. He agreed and I got some work-related (slashdot ;>) tasks done that week because everyone was out of my hair.

    Schools nowadays have a ton of tasks to keep students busy but face it, there are going to be people who aren't going to be interested. Quite possibly they just want to get the whole thing out of the way and focus on learning so they can move on.


    Or who are seriously disenchanted with school or the structure of school.

    Let's face it, people who dislike school..simply dislike school. It doesn't make them irrational or insane. They just don't like it.

    Have experience with chronic bullying...

    Does this mean THEY do the bullying or are bullied themselves? This actually goes against what most of the slashdot community has been saying in the wake of the hellmouth series. Most of the people who fit this profile are usually BEING bullied.
  • strlen(&life); by Signal 11 (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:50AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by Kinthelt (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:51AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by warpeightbot (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:51AM
  • it says you weren't raised in a TV commercial by zptdooda (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:52AM
  • I score 7.5/8 and was dangerous by rm-r (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:52AM
  • by rodentia (102779) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:52AM (#1497080)
    I'll wager a significant proportion of slashdotterii fit this profile. I know I do and committed my share of violent, primarily self-destructive acts. But the key here is that the profile is being used to identify potential violent offenders, the better to react swiftly with the full force of the law as necessary. It would be naieve to imagine that the FBI, BCA, or ATF are profiling individuals for some "love."

    I was a principal suspect in a pretty serious local crime based on the heresay of a "concerned" law enforcement official. The BCA interviewed my parents and girlfriend while I was in school. The up-shot: come home from school to find myself homeless, my girlfriend no longer permitted contact with me. They apprehended the responsible party a few weeks later, but I didn't get the girl back and an already tenuous relationship with my parents deteriorated further. I won't bore you with the details of the black decade which followed, suffice to say there is a big hole where my twenties should have been thanks to the intervention of "concerned" adults.
  • Great Nerd Scare of '99 by Dark Ramon (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:52AM
  • Another hand raised... by ./ (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:52AM
  • Re:Individuals With Disabilities Act VIOLATION!!! by tweek (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:53AM
  • The Profile Fits! (Score:5)

    by A Big Gnu Thrush (12795) on Monday November 29 1999, @04:54AM (#1497085)
    Engage in attention-seeking behavior, and don't accept criticism.

    Well, the profile fits Katz at least. It might not catch potential murderers, but it may help us find and contain future "journalists".

    I support Katz profiling!
  • Doesn't anybody in the school know kids? by hey! (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:54AM
  • Go JonKatz! by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:54AM
  • Re:hey wait by nhowie (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:54AM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by remande (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:54AM
  • Re:Why so many problems in the US? by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:54AM
  • Good Lord! by Our Man In Redmond (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:55AM
  • Re:This is actually kind of scary... Kind of??? by Kyriani (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:56AM
  • I Wanna Kill! by quonsar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:56AM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by Zerth (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:57AM
  • Re:A few comments... by adimarco (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:57AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Gurlia (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @04:58AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by sallgeud (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:58AM
  • Off topic - Xfiles/Millenium by Saige (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:59AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:00AM
  • Orwell, Turn over in thy Grave. by Delphinios (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:01AM
  • escape to Canada - we /like/ people with brains! by zptdooda (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:01AM
  • Orwell, Turn over in thy Grave. by Delphinios (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:02AM
  • Re:This is actually kind of scary by Arjuna01 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:02AM
  • Blame the administrators. by Breakfast Cereal (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:04AM
  • Re:Comments on the "areas" by PhilHibbs (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:05AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Wah (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:05AM
  • Re:Bullying by kootch (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:06AM
  • Fear in the US by Neuroprophet (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:06AM
  • Hell no, this doesn't apply to me. by oneiros27 (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:07AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by perky (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:08AM
  • Re:Bullying by Malacai[GDI] (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:08AM
  • Re:Why so many problems in the US? by tal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:09AM
  • Re:A few comments... by tweek (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:09AM
  • Other student cultures by KingOfCartoons (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:09AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by rde (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:10AM
  • Last year by pnevares (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:10AM
  • Need New Term -- Not Geek/Not Nerd by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:12AM
  • This is meant to save lives... by Psiren (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:13AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by dodobh (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:13AM
  • LARPing by kootch (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:14AM
  • Lurking Geek Anonymous Coward Pervert by Delta9 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:15AM
  • Today schools... tommorrow the world by Diamond Slicer (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:17AM
  • Re:Hmm by baeta (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:17AM
  • Giving a Damn (Score:5)

    by goliard (46585) on Monday November 29 1999, @05:17AM (#1497132)

    They need to be shown that somebody who can do something gives a damn.

    Actually, it's sufficient to be shown that anybody gives a damn - even if they can't do anything about it.

    Of course, it's nicer if they can rescue you from your misery. But we geeks are made of stern stuff. We can tough out anything, so long as we have corroborating evidence of our premises: just one other person saying "You are worth fighting for" is all it takes to make a difference.

    (And may this stand as an indictment: that there are clearly young men who have never once heard that message.)

    Here is the one needful thing; if you find yourself in a situation with such an anguished young person, this is what you can say:

    "What has been done to you is wrong. What is being done to you is wrong. It is wrong for anyone to hit you. It is wrong for you to have to live in fear of physical violence. It is wrong for you to feel hatred for yourself, and it is wrong for people to try to make you hate yourself. You are not crazy for being in pain. You do not deserve to be treated like this."

    Those are the words no one ever says.
    ----------------------------------------------

  • Re:Bullying by Rabbins (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:17AM
  • Re:Bullying by GC (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:18AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by hburch (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:18AM
  • Katz adding to the media hype? by Phizzy (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:19AM
  • WOOHOO!!! Congress!! by ahaning (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:19AM
  • On Schools, the 10 commandments, and the press by Mark F. Komarinski (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:20AM
  • Geeks don't make good sheeple by Brian Knotts (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:21AM
  • A new .sig by otis wildflower (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:22AM
  • We needed a new enemy by Coldwar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:22AM
  • An alarmist Katz article how unusual . by sarkeizen (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:23AM
  • Strong Neurophysiological evidence for ADD by mattz (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:25AM
  • Fact check? by Argy (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:26AM
  • Going to one of the sources by Captain Sarcastic (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:27AM
  • FBI moderation by hburch (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:29AM
  • Re:I'm amazed by ransom (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:30AM
  • Re:Don't blame the educators.. by Tilde~ (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:30AM
  • Hmm by kettle12 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:30AM
  • geeks take light off nerds ;( by galdidos (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:31AM
  • WHY I OUGHTA!!!! by SL33Z3 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:31AM
  • Hoo, boy. by pb (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:33AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by bob9134 (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:33AM
  • Just why I... by Jimhotep (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:35AM
  • Wow, I guess they'll be comin fer me.. by zi0n (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:35AM
  • Pleasantville suburbia by jabber (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:35AM
  • I think that's most of us... by nexxed (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:36AM
  • Surfing loners and sociopaths by Yogurtu (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:36AM
  • by evand (2571) <edibiase+slashdot@noSPAm.gmail.com> on Monday November 29 1999, @05:38AM (#1497163) Homepage
    Slashdotters, hear me out:

    What Jon is reporting here today strikes me as completely insane. Far from the normal drivel of laws and regulations put out by our society, this particular "program" is designed (even if this is unintentional) to conform us to what is "normal."

    This is the design of the entire program. If you're scared to death of being smart, of knowing what you're doing on the computer, of playing the games that relieve so much tension built up thoughout the day, then you must conform. There is no other option. If you're not smart, you will become "average" in intelligence (or at least appear that way). If you don't know what you're doing on the computer, you will only be average at it. If you don't play computer games, you'll have to play other sports all the time like everyone else. In short, you will become the norm.

    Technically, though, how are geeks different from the much-celebrated "jocks" and cheerleaders in our society? Both groups are relentlessly dedicated to one particular thing (be it computers, sports and girls, or guys and makeup). Both groups spend large amounts of time working at their particular field of intrest (again, computers, sports and girls, or guys and makeup). Why, psychologically, do we as a culture shun one group and exult the other? The answer is simple, if you look hard enough past the propaganda.

    Geeks are a threat. People are scared of us. We can do things that they can't do; that they can't control. In their minds, everyone who plays Quake has the plans for an atomic bomb and is just waiting for a chance to use it. In their minds, everyone who can program or use the internet well is someone who can change their lives; delete their records and make sure that they never existed. These people think that being smart should be a crime, because it allows geeks to break free of the cultural bonds that bind them.

    This is why we must take action.

    The internet is the one last stand for the geeks. This is where we can say what we want. This is where we can express ourselves to the fullest extent without fear of retribution or ridicule. We can speak our minds, reach for the future, and declare, freely, that 2 + 2 does indeed equal 4. But they're trying to take it away from us.

    If the school counselors get us; if our parents decide that we should be off the computer permanantly, this last stand will dissolve almost overnight. The internet will be taken over for the uses of the media and the government, just like everything else in this country. Your news for nerds will be the news they want you to hear, and if you think that you'll be able to reply you're in a dreamworld. Will you find any sites like the EFF? I'd doubt it. When they have rwxrwxrwx access to all the files on every server, pages that proclaim our right to free speech will at best be deleted, and at worst modified.

    Does the above paragraph seem farfetched? It shouldn't. It's only a few steps away, once we geeks are taken off of the computer systems. Remember, the mass media will report only the news that it gets, and if the only news that it gets is that Mosaic 2000 is going to help reduce school shootings, that's all it's going to report. Because, obviously, we would never be so dangerous if we didn't have access to the internet. The nightly news isn't going to tell us about our encryption abilities being taken away from us. We'll just have to sit back, relax, and watch the telescreen... er... television...

    This is not the future I want to live in, and I'd bet that most of you don't want to live there, either. But what can we do? Older geeks, I beseech you. Do what we minors can't. Vote responsibly for people who are against this thing. Tell your senators what you feel as a tax-paying citizen. Speak out at school board meetings.
    Geeks like me -- any age under 18 -- FIGHT THIS! Talk about it in school. Mention it to your friends.
    Everyone, geeks old or new, can do other things. Write letters to the editor. Put messages about Mosaic 2000 and similar programs in your .signature. Hold protests.

    If we work together, we can stop this kind of action now, instead of when its too late. For if we fail, in the end, we will be just as helpless as Orwell's protagonist to resist; for once ignorance is strength and 2 + 2 = 5, we have no hope. Our only possibility will be to sit back, relax, drink some Victory Gin, and let the telescreen lull us to sleep. But somehow, I know that there is the spirit of the fighter in some of us. We will stop this thing, and not only will we have stopped it, but we will have assured ourselves a place where bounds are endless and where we are truly free.
  • High School:  Obsolete? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:38AM
  • Yippieh, I'm a sociopathic Killer! by Bartmoss (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:39AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:39AM
  • Taboos and Inhibitions by johnrpenner (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:40AM
  • What to do...? by Moxen (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:40AM
  • Re:I'm amazed by Kintanon (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:40AM
  • Re: Bullying by educators by penguinicide (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:42AM
  • What kind of profile is this really? by G27 Radio (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:43AM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by homebru (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @05:44AM
  • Re:Bullying by Alex Belits (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:47AM
  • If I were the paranoid type... by celtic heretic (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:47AM
  • Above averag e intelligence? Not quite. by wuice (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:48AM
  • by Seth Scali (18018) on Monday November 29 1999, @05:49AM (#1497181)
    I'm not disagreeing with your main point, Jon-- the geek profiling is bullshit. I don't think administrators are out to get us geeks, but I think that severely misguided principals will wind up inadvertently fucking up a lot of kids this way.

    But let's see why the profile fits so well with most geeks:

    Klebold and Harris were both computer whiz-kids that also excelled in math and foreign languages (hence all the emphasis on speaking German). The "Trenchcoat Mafia" was nothing more than a group of unpopular kids that would hang out together. Klebold and Harris spoke frequently of guns, death, violence, etc. The two were very much anti-authority. I don't know about family life... But they fit the profile pretty well.

    Kip Kinkle was very much involved in guns. He also was an honor student, and unpopular (jokingly said to have been voted "most likely to start world war three"). He had a lot of resentment for authority, though he voiced his anger and outrage to those closest to him. He fit the profile pretty well.

    How about the Jonesboro shooters? A little more difficult-- these kids were 11 and 13. But they were both fascinated with guns and death. They both did well enough in school. And they were described as kids that nobody really even paid attention to-- nothing remarkable, but they certainly weren't popular. They don't fit perfectly, but they do hit some of the points on the FBI profile.

    Or how about Matt Myers? Killed Chris Eggleston in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Fascinated with murder and death. Trouble with the law. Nasty custody battle, wound up living with his grandparents. Part of a group of social outsiders known as the "Vampires". Fucking scary bright. He fits the profile perfectly.

    Taking a purely scientific view of the above data, we see the following:

    *The data presented is hardly enough to be statistically relevant. Bias in any one of the above cases is enough to invalidate the results entirely.

    *The data above is incomplete. How many other cases of a similar nature are there? What are the details of those cases?

    *Assuming that the data is unbiased and representative of the entire population, we still have nothing more that a statistical correlation. And even then, we are unable to determine the strength of this relationship.

    *Playing devil's advocate, we can say that the relationship is a strong relationship-- 90% or more of the killers fit the profile. This still doesn't imply causation. There are a number of other factors that might enter into the picture-- acting as if A implies B (especially on such a small set of data) is not only scientifically unsound, but foolish.

    So I guess you can say that the profile may have *some* statistical relevance; but it has very little scientific relevance.

    Then again, scientists probably fit the profiles themselves :-)

    Just my $0.02
  • by goliard (46585) on Monday November 29 1999, @05:49AM (#1497182)

    OK, so we pretty much all seem to agree that things can really, really suck for young geeks.

    I suspect everyone here would agree that intervention is desirable, as amphigory neatly describes.

    I suspect we largely agree with the sentiment (expressed in another thread) that the intervention which the current system is prepared to do ranges from "inept" to "violation of human rights".

    Well, that's because the intervention is done by normals. They're never going to get how to help a geek in distress, because (a) they have never been through it and lack the empathy necessary for problem solving and (b) they are unaware of some of the issues peculiar to geeks (list available on request; my profile is better than the FBI's :).

    So the question before us is: So, should we, collectively and individually, be Doing Something?

    I'm a geek, right. I don't have any particular warm fuzzy feeling about social-program volunteering, and I don't suspect any other geek does. HOWEVER:

    If we don't help, aren't we part of the problem: an indifferent world that leaves these kids to rot in their misery?

    What I'm envisioning is an organization much like Big Brother/Big Sister -- only run by and for geeks. A sort of "Big Geek" service.

    A couple of notes on the idea:

    1. There is (allegedly) already another organization focusing on outcast anti-defamation; this would be an organization providing intervention.
    2. The reason for making it an organization, as opposed to individual efforts, would be so that it would build "brand" (name identity) so that school administrators would think to call it in.
    3. The intervention provided could be as simple as a kind of mentoring relationship. But maybe senior geeks would be moved to intervene more profoundly, offering on-the-job apprenticeships (get them out of the schools!), fostering (taking them in if home life gets untenable), help graduating from high school/applying to colleges early, etc.

    Would people actually participate in something like this?


    ----------------------------------------------

  • by galadriel (42210) on Monday November 29 1999, @05:49AM (#1497183) Homepage
    ) Any links/ideas to what "they" do after a geek is profiled?

    In my high school (college-prep, designed to attract justthose above-average intellect high schoolers), it came to the attention of my guidnce counselor that _something_ was wrong in my life...

    After all, when a kid repeatedly skips first period to cry in the clinic, something's wrong [it was mostly my home life].

    She called me into her office and told me that she'd spoken to my mother [the source of most of my anguish], and that clearly nothing was wrong. I had to "grow up" and go back to class.

    I guess what I'm saying is that [in my expeirience, in a school FOR GEEKS] even when guidance counselors can clearly see that something is wrong in a kid's life, they don't know how to handle it.

    They'll believe someone else over you--if you're a geek, they'll believe the popular kids, they'll believe your parents, they'll believe the teachers who have no idea what's really going on...but they won't listen to you.
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by rnturn (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:50AM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by derk (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:51AM
  • Violence in Canada by sneak.attack (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:51AM
  • by frankie (91710) on Monday November 29 1999, @05:51AM (#1497187) Homepage Journal
    once someone is labeled a pontential killer, I wonder what they will do with them. Force them to become jocks?

    Nah, just transfer them to the new maximum security school next to the old industrial park. You see, these smart kids are disillusioned and angry because they've been oppressed and bullied by peers, teachers, and administrators since elementary school. So obviously the answer is to oppress them some more, until their spirit is properly broken. Then they'll behave like proper social units.

    I love the language used in the profile: does the student "have experience with chronic bullying?" Such lovely doubletalk -- they're not hunting for the INFLICTERS of arbitrary violence (who will grow up to be vice principals or middle managers). Mosaic wants to proactively punish the VICTIMS, before they retaliate. TheOnion did a fabulous satire on this topic [theonion.com]

  • Re:Giving a Damn by Goliard. by bungalow (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:53AM
  • Nobody's mentioned the most dangerous information. by canter (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:57AM
  • You forgot FBI's model citizen checklist by earache (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:59AM
  • Re:FIRST *NAKED AND PETRIFIED* POST!!!!!!! by Alex Belits (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:01AM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:02AM
  • hmm... by 0xdeadbeef (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:02AM
  • "don't accept criticism" by brokenwm (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:02AM
  • Being Bullied Makes You A Target by Carnage4Life (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:03AM
  • Re:Bullying (Score:5)

    by coyote-san (38515) on Monday November 29 1999, @06:04AM (#1497199)
    Sadly, a strong argument can be made that the victums of bullying are potentially more dangerous than the bullies themselves. Emphasis on "potentially."

    We would call the logic sick, but it matches reality. Bullies already know how to handle anger and frustration - they go beat up somebody weaker than themselves. If they fought someone as strong as themselves they would called "fighters," not "bullies," and if they fought somebody stronger than themselves they would be described as having a death wish.

    But how do the victims of the bullies handle anger and frustration? Some will have their own, non-violent, outlets, others will become bullies themselves, but the rest will keep that anger inside. When it becomes too much to bear, they might only have a single model for how to deal with it - taking out the "weak." But instead of using their fists, they'll use their brain and be *far* more dangerous.

    So if we use history as a guide, it's appropriate to use a history of being bullied as a warning flag for future violence -- but we must also show absolutely no mercy to the bullies themselves. By this same logic, they are acting as recklessly as if they tossed a dozen loaded firearms into the schoolyard playground. Keep track of the victims, if necessary, but the bullies should be expelled on first offense, and locked up on the second offense. If that ruins the football season, tough shit.
  • Keep the schools happy. by Damon C. Richardson (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:04AM
  • Billy G by Dubber (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:05AM
  • Re:Mosaic up North by silvwolf (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:07AM
  • oh hear, hear... by galadriel (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:08AM
  • Re:Twilight Zone to come true? by RJ11 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:08AM
  • There I am, in print. by RISCy Business (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:08AM
  • More questions, better questions by benenglish (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:10AM
  • If my kids get profiled, expect a lawsuit by slypup (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:11AM
  • Re:Don't blame the educators.. by nexxed (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:12AM
  • Walden might scare some people as subversive, by zptdooda (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:12AM
  • Re:Bullying by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:12AM
  • Wow I am a potential psycho by thelopez (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:13AM
  • Re:Bullying by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:13AM
  • This could be good for those of us who survived HS by pngwen (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:14AM
  • Re:Comments on the "areas" by Plugh (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:15AM
  • Re:Why so many problems in the US? by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:16AM
  • Re:Making a difference: a Question to Slashdot by Moxen (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:16AM
  • New name for /. by nhowie (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:16AM
  • Maybe it's just me, but..... by JM_the_Great (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:18AM
  • Re:hmm... by Amphigory (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:18AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by TGmentor (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:22AM
  • Re:hmm... by Tasty (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:22AM
  • The word you want is "totalitarianism" by rlglende (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:23AM
  • Re:Giving a Damn by Amphigory (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:24AM
  • Great new T-shirt idea. by Breakfast Cereal (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:26AM
  • Re:hmm... by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:27AM
  • Re:Bullying by GC (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:27AM
  • Re: guidance counselors by ConceptJunkie (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:30AM
  • Re:Why so many problems in the US? by TheCarp (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:30AM
  • Sounds like me... by chuckw (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:30AM
  • Law Enforcement Profiling is a JOKE. by TGmentor (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:31AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:33AM
  • fear leads to...more money by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:33AM
  • These Tests Don't Work by The Variable Man (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:35AM
  • Re:So... now what? by bungalow (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:40AM
  • Scared out of my mind... by jerrol (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:40AM
  • muhahah by nerdling (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:41AM
  • The NSA?...not a chance. by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:42AM
  • Try taking the Mad Scientist test... by jtribble (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:42AM
  • by scheme (19778) on Monday November 29 1999, @06:47AM (#1497261)
    Assuming that the data is unbiased and representative of the entire population, we still have nothing more that a statistical correlation. And even then, we are unable to determine the strength of this relationship.

    Granted the data seems to only imply a correlation but correlations are often useful. While they do not imply that one factor causes the other they do allow one make fairly accurate predictions. For example, the presence of smoke and a fire are strongly correlated so if you see smoke you can usually predict that there is a fire.

    If you consider some philosophical stances (e.g. Hume), correlations are the only thing that we have since we can not prove causation for anything. We base science on very strongly correlated things. Nothing tells us the sun will rise in the east tomorrow but we are fairly confident that it will do so tomorrow since it has done so every morning. (For those that claim that physics tells us the sun will rise in the east, what insures that the laws of physics won't change tomorrow?)

  • Everybody is a "geek" then by Hard_Code (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:50AM
  • Just remember... by Brew Bird (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:52AM
  • Re:Do we deserve this? by Bearpaw (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:54AM
  • Re:Bullying by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:56AM
  • why aren't there more killers? by no-s (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:57AM
  • No by chromatic (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:59AM
  • Describes me perfectly, I guess by palp (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:00AM
  • *Evil laugh* by SyscoKid (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:00AM
  • Re:hmm... by bogado (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:00AM
  • Re:hmm... by bogado (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:00AM
  • And:I would say... by iCEBaLM (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:02AM
  • Re:no problem with this "profiling" by Weird_one (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:03AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:04AM
  • Students WON'T be asked to answer question. by Sly Mongoose (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:04AM
  • Above average intelligence by scott__ (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:06AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by warpeightbot (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:16AM
  • School Administration/LEO Profiling Test by ryanr (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:16AM
  • Katz the demagouge.... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:16AM
  • FBI setting the standard. by Pool (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:16AM
  • Hey, watch out by Wolfier (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:17AM
  • Are these replies for real? by jd (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:20AM
  • FBI setting the standard. by Pool (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:22AM
  • hey...thats me...wait a minute.... by AndroSyn (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:23AM
  • Re:Comments on the "areas" by teeheehee (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:24AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Lord Kano (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:24AM
  • Absolutely RIGHT. by symbolic (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:26AM
  • Re:This sounds too much like facism.. by Brown (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:27AM
  • Re:BWAAHAHAHAH -- just what we need! by Randym (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:27AM
  • Re:FBI setting the standard. by Pool (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:28AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by lifebouy (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:32AM
  • by scheme (19778) on Monday November 29 1999, @07:36AM (#1497298)

    Although I'm in opposition to the majority here and will probably get negative moderation for this, I think that Katz is overreacting. There are several problems with Katz's article.

    A major fault is that Katz doesn't provide any evidence to support his claims. He cites emails from several principles and administrators but doesn't give us a copy of the report, just a list of characteristics. We're not even sure if the list of characteristics is complete. The url for the halifax paper is link to a bank robber being caught not a "geek profile." In addition I'm curious why a canadian law enforcement agency has the profile and is giving it to canadian papers. Toss in the lack of coverage in other media sources and I'm sceptical as to the validity of the profile.

    My other problem with this is that Katz seems to see a lot of the reaction to the Columbine incident as being "anti-Geek." He also seems to believe that profiles aren't necessary. Although, one would ideally want schools to evaluate everyone individually, schools have limited resource so it makes sense to have a profile that selects those most likely to be violent/dangerous/in need of help and focus the resources on those people. In analogy, think about how many system administrator read through system log files every day and how many use logcheck, swatch, etc. to just screen out the important ones based on a profile.

    Katz claims that "bullies and predator" that pick on other children aren't singled out but several of the points in the checklist apply
    Come from dysfunctional homes.
    Experience unstable self-esteem.
    Have experience with chronic bullying and drug use.

    I think the second item is applicable and since most bullies usually have a dysfunctional family file the first one applies. In addition, bullying is often used to bolster a lack of self-esteem so the second item probably also fits. Katz's assertion about teachers is not valid since the profile is supposed to pick out potentially dangerous students. Whether schools/teachers are responsible for this is a valid question but is not importance in the context of a discussion on the merits of the profile.

    Katx also goes on to bring in Mosaic-2000. Doing so is irresponsible and does not contribute anything to the article. Given that the details of how the program identifies "dangerous" students and how this program will be used, claiming that this program will select geeks is not very credible.

    All in all, I think that Katz is overreacting or delibrately trying to provoke a reaction among the Slashdot community. His evidence is based on heresay, and links that don't check out. The lack of coverage in other media also discredits his article. The widespread coverage that the national media gave to Mosaic-2000 makes their silence on this profile all the more damning.

  • Re:Well, that's me. by spazimodo (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:36AM
  • Re:Mosaic up North by Wah (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:37AM
  • Remember the massacre in Tasmania a few years ago? by Xanthan Gum (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:39AM
  • Re:Bullying by eiPi (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:41AM
  • What the hell are you talking about? by adimarco (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:41AM
  • Re:hmm... by Amphigory (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:45AM
  • Is there a legal remedy for this? by GOD_ALMIGHTY (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:46AM
  • Re:Oh my. by Anitra (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:47AM
  • Re:LARPing by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:47AM
  • Teachers unions and standards by Eric Green (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:47AM
  • +2? by delmoi (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:50AM
  • What should be done about it. by vik (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:51AM
  • um, no by delmoi (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:53AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Eric Green (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @07:56AM
  • vent by penfold (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:56AM
  • Fitting the profile.... by MAXOMENOS (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:59AM
  • What we should watch for by kspencer (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:59AM
  • Re:This is meant to save lives... by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:00AM
  • what about the /. readers? by relya (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:03AM
  • Re:Bullying by synthe (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:06AM
  • One thing missing from the list by Strango (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:07AM
  • Heh, I get 100% for the first time in my life! by segmond (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:08AM
  • Re:Violent Juvenile Crime: by Squid (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:09AM
  • Bullying not the problem by ranton (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:15AM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by bla (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:16AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by mattsouthworth (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:17AM
  • Re:Bullying by Rabbins (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:17AM
  • Re:bye bye privacy by PG13 (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @08:21AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by rabidMacBigot() (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @08:25AM
  • Re:Lawrence Peter would find this interesting. by Descent X13 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:27AM
  • Ditto. by Kenobi (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:29AM
  • the most imporntant question is... by delmoi (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @08:30AM
  • Just taking ideas from statement 1 by slashdot-terminal (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:31AM
  • Re:Teachers unions and standards by Thag (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:32AM
  • Actually... by Tarquin (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:34AM
  • Re:Violent Juvenile Crime: by Rabbins (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:34AM
  • Re:This sounds too much like facism.. by Sailor Death (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:36AM
  • Racial Profiling & Geek Profiling by supz (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:39AM
  • My $.02cr by Kid Zero (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:39AM
  • Turnabout is Fair Play? by ministerofpropaganda (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:41AM
  • Re:um, no by Last Warrior (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:42AM
  • Re:Bullying by Squid (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:47AM
  • Re:Bullying by iabervon (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @08:47AM
  • control by twitter (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @08:49AM
  • by Seth Scali (18018) on Monday November 29 1999, @08:52AM (#1497358)
    I will admit that strong correlations are extremely important, and there *are* philosophies that show that we can only be certain to a certain percentage (i.e., 99.9999999999999999999%). Without evidence supplied by statistical relationships, we can't do *any* type of research. Dismissing it as "nothing more than a statistical relationship" was not my intention-- my intention was to dismiss the application of the correlation, but it didn't really come out that way.

    My main problem is with the attitude that if we get rid of the smoke, we get rid of the fire (to use your analogy). For example, let's say Joe Geek gets targeted as a dangerous kid (he fits the demographic in a lot of ways). What would he do?

    * He would not mention the fact that he plays Quake to anybody
    * He would definitely stop hanging out with the small group of friends he has. He would sit in the middle of crowds, trying to look like he fits in even though he isn't talking to anybody.
    * He would stop carrying around "A Course In Combinatorics" and "Cryptonomicon" in his backpack and start carrying around books by Steinbeck and Ginsberg.

    After being observed by the administrators for a suitable period of time, it is determined that Joe Geek does not fit the demographic and is therefore not a threat. But in reality, Joe is just angrier at the school-- he's just not showing it. This only serves to make it all the more likely that he'll act out his anger in improper ways, perhaps even in violent outbursts.

    Correlation is a good thing, and it should not be dismissed offhand. It's one of the most powerful tools that a scientist has-- and used properly, it can give insight into the way things work and the why they work that way.

    But don't assume that "mainstreaming" a person will make him or her less "apt to kill".
  • What is this country coming to? by mach-5 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:52AM
  • Profiling ????? by Stavr0 (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @08:53AM
  • They don't sit you down and ask... by Tetsujin (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:56AM
  • All I ever needed to know I learned from T.V. by Bad Mojo (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:02AM
  • Re:Short sited to think the FBI is this stupid. by SnakeStu (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:03AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by Kinthelt (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:07AM
  • yay by asink (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:08AM
  • Let not the best be the enemy of the good by goliard (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:17AM
  • Big Brother loves you all very much! by 187 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:18AM
  • Re:Bullying by Parity (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @09:22AM
  • Uh-oh. Call the cops. by Wonko42 (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @09:22AM
  • Re:hey wait by TheCodeMaster (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:29AM
  • This is a goverment jab. by mrBoB (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:29AM
  • by archduke (107641) on Monday November 29 1999, @09:30AM (#1497382)
    That's dead on. The assumption of guilt here is absurd & unbelievable. The state could arguably enforce a survey, assuming it was somewhat less bogus than this one, and compile statistics, but only as aggregates and totals in numbers of students, etc. Never should the state be allowed to associate the results to the individuals's names, as that violates this principle: It's also even more abberant in the fact that these are also the identities of minors, which should be confidential and undisclosed to begin with according to youth-protection acts. For the system to work, the state must abide by its own rules and charters. Also the assumption that hanging in a clique is dangerous! All groups are by definition exclusive from other groups or the masses, this is how we establish the bounds of a group. And what happenned to the right to assembly: to gather with other individuals for various cooperative social or political functions? This is one of the cornerstones of liberty.
  • why why why why why??!!~~~~~~ by impaler (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:30AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by sjames (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @09:36AM
  • Re:Bullying by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:37AM
  • by nano-second (54714) on Monday November 29 1999, @09:42AM (#1497388)

    Jon Katz has now written too many stories on thsis topic, with too little new content. They are all emotional pulls about geeks and how highschool is unkind to them.

    Hellmouth 1: The Original story [slashdot.org].
    Hellmouth 2: The Sequel story [slashdot.org].
    Hellmouth 3: The Let's-Make-it-a-Trilogy story [slashdot.org].
    Hellmouth 4: The Mosaic-2000 story [slashdot.org].
    Hellmouth 5: The Here's Proof story [slashdot.org].

    And currently posted at a slashdot forum near you .... Hellmouth 6. (You're reading it!)

    While the first couple Hellmouth articles might have been informative and interesting, I think Katz has exhausted the topic. The articles seem to have very little to say, other than 'this is how geeks in highschool are being treated unfairly now'. They don't contain much new information, and certainly, Katz never seems to have any new insights. Obviously these articles connect to a lot of us, who do fit such "profiles" to some degree, and a lot of us had not-so-good high school experiences, but I am getting a bit sick of these emotionally overwrought fluff articles.

    There is nothing new about this "News".

    ---

  • What about installation? by Norny (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:44AM
  • Re:Making a difference: a Question to Slashdot by Relic of the Future (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @09:44AM
  • Re:Hmm by Powers (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:46AM
  • Re:Great new T-shirt idea. by Kintanon (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @09:48AM
  • Re:What is this country coming to? by Squid (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:50AM
  • Re:Bullying by Michael Woodhams (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:51AM
  • Shades of _Enders Game_? by Mycroft-X (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:53AM
  • Re:they forgot one... by Paladeen (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:54AM
  • Geek or Killer: Define "Well-adjusted" by xenotrope (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:56AM
  • WHOA THERE! by shiftaling1 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:56AM
  • "is your kid on drugs" ... by whocares (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:02AM
  • People are thinking of this the wrong way... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:11AM
  • Re:So... now what? by X-ViRGE (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:11AM
  • Re:So... now what? by X-ViRGE (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:12AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by fiori (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:12AM
  • Re:hmm... by Amphigory (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @10:14AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by Clockwork Apple (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:15AM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by GomerDomer (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:16AM
  • It was TZ, not OL - more info found by SpiceWare (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:16AM
  • Re:Go JonKatz! by xmedar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:19AM
  • Get started... by Rabbins (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @10:23AM
  • It's all about conformity. by m0e (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:31AM
  • Conspiracy, anyone? by infojunkie (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:35AM
  • I suspect very few. . . by Cyberllama (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:39AM
  • Profiling Mass-Violence prone schools by Velox_SwiftFox (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:42AM
  • Re:hmm... (Score:3)

    by Amphigory (2375) on Monday November 29 1999, @10:45AM (#1497431) Homepage
    Let me answer your post carefully and thourougly:


    > Yes, Amphigory has an agenda, but that doesn't mean that what he says
    > isn't true.

    And what is my agenda? And what I said was true. I have been "through
    the hellmouth".

    > Remember the way that in Animal Farm after the animals had
    > been living under the tyrant pigs for many years they started listening
    > to that bird who tried to sell them the "Rock Candy Mountain" idea
    > again. (Their reason being that after suffering all their lives and
    > dying miserable, surely there had to be something afterwards.)

    No... at the time I wished there wasn't a God, so that I could have
    killed myself. I wanted to die for good reason. But God saved me from
    that.

    > Amphigory would probably love to see us all forced into church (his
    > church, not the one I attend) at gun-point, "for our own good." Of
    > course, it is also quite possible that he is lying, people in the
    > biggest cult we've got going in this country (They call themselves
    > Christians, but seem to find the actual text of the New Testament to
    > be decidedly inconvenient.) are quite capable of lying to achieve
    > their ends, despite the Ten Commandments.

    You seem to think I'm a fundamentalist. Upon what do you base this? I'm
    not. I am an average, theologically conservative Christian who takes the
    text of the new testament /very/ seriously. Do you? How bout the part
    about "Brothers, do not slander one another"? (James 4:11) You impute
    thjat you are a Christian, well let me call you to task and say that your
    callous slander of me without facts or anything else is distinctively non
    Christian.

    As far as forcing people to attend to church: how on earth could you know
    that? I am actually very strongly against religious involvement in
    government, am against prayer in public schools, and am against this
    posting the ten commandments idiocy. But you didn't bother to find that
    out, did you? You just slandered me when I dared to be vulnerable. Very
    Christian of you, punk.


    > o you are right to question it, but I tend to think that behind all
    > unreasoning religious fanaticism lies a foundation of severe emotional
    > scarring.

    Which unreasoning religious fanaticism was that? Specific example,
    please. Would that be my belief that religion can help people? That's
    the only one which you could possibly be aware of from my post.

    > To be fair, I may send my own children to a religious school (of my
    > own choosing) rather than a public school, if they are going to get
    > religion at school, I'd prefer it to be the religion I was raised in
    > and not some wierd dogma that I find to be "cultish" in its
    > application. (Remember Reverend Jim of the People's Temple claimed to
    > be a Christian.) This is actually happening at some schools in this
    > country, see this article. This is what happens when educated people
    > don't pay attention to local politics.

    Once again, you imply many nasty things about me without knowing me or
    anything about me; without knowing my beliefs or anything about them.
    Your slanders genuinely wounded me. But somehow I guess that you're not
    sorry. You're too busy (to refer to Animal Farm: I've read it, go
    figure!) being a pig.
  • Re:Hmm, let's innocent... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:47AM
  • I'm disappointed with the FBI. by Lord of Lies (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:51AM
  • Re:um, no by xmedar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:52AM
  • Re:I suspect very few. . . by Enoch Root (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:57AM
  • Re:um, no by xmedar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:59AM
  • that statistics of murder? by bingbong (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:00AM
  • Re:People are thinking of this the wrong way... by shiftaling1 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:06AM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by rnturn (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:09AM
  • Re:Giving a Damn by Winged Cat (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:11AM
  • Abbreviated Test by Cy Guy (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @11:12AM
  • Re:control (Score:3)

    by Mr. Slippery (47854) <tms AT infamous DOT net> on Monday November 29 1999, @11:12AM (#1497447) Homepage
    The New York Times has an article running with erie similarities to this conversational thread. It shows where such Left leaning thoughts can lead
    Please don't say "left leaning" when you mean "authoritarian". The left (labor) / right (capital) axis is orthogonal to the libertarian / authoritarian one.
  • Re:Serial killers, while at it? by bluespower (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:19AM
  • Potentially far more dangerous is, sadly, right... by Svartalf (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:26AM
  • Heil Clinton ? by Jeconais (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:32AM
  • Get a plane ticket by xmedar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:39AM
  • Fuel-air Bombs and High-Schools- gonna happen yet! by Svartalf (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:43AM
  • Fuel-air Bombs and High-Schools- gonna happen yet! by Svartalf (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:44AM
  • Re: Bullying by educators by Leareth (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:45AM
  • A more significant threat by wickline (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:58AM
  • Love is the solution-everything else is a band-aid by daniel-san (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @11:59AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by ElecCham (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:09PM
  • Premises (Score:3)

    by chromatic (9471) on Monday November 29 1999, @12:14PM (#1497467) Homepage

    I think we agree more than disagree. Where our views start to diverge is how we both answer the question, "To what degree are geeks different from non-geeks?"

    From your post, phrases like 'We are a people' and 'We need different... cultural tools' lead me to believe that your answer to that question is "To a very great degree, at a fundamental level."

    While I agree that there are differences between geeks and everybody else, I don't think they're that deep. We all follow Maslow's hierarchy fairly closely. I have a desire to be needed and respected and loved just as the quarterback of my high school football team does. My social group in high school got picked on, and we picked on other people, including some of the jocks.

    To follow the example you give, introversion is not limited to the geek set. I've met plenty of introverted people who had little else in common with me. Also, I think just about everybody goes 'off the rails' during adolescence -- I've met very few adolescents who didn't suffer through periods of questioning authority and one's identity. In my opinion, no one fits the Conforming Norm, and any program that fails to recognize this will have limited successes.

    The thing that scares me here is the idea of a Geek Identity movement. If people sit down and start to think, "Hey, those guys are a whole lot different from everyone else," doesn't that lend validity to the whole Geek Profile thing Katz is railing about? I mean, look at what's happened to the Goths -- they're hardly suicidal Manson freaks, but that's the stereotype. That's what scares me. It's bad enough that kids feel the need to kill themselves and others, but if superficial similarities are used to alienate kids like we were even further....

    You're absolutely right on the unstated premise in your last paragraph -- we're better off helping kids like ourselves. I certainly have sympathies for the little guy out there with a big stack of books, a guitar, a computer, and nothing else. Does that mean I ought to be Rob Malda's Big Brother?

    --

  • signature reply by ElecCham (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:15PM
  • Re:Dangerous as an Adult! by EQ (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:21PM
  • Re:Typical by locrian (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:21PM
  • Re:um, no by Tarnar (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @12:24PM
  • Re:Need New Term -- Not Geek/Not Nerd by baeta (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:31PM
  • NSA Application by MikeJ9919 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:33PM
  • Re:Violence non-existent in Canada? by Meathook (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:33PM
  • Can I turn in Bill Gates for a reward? by WillAffleck (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:38PM
  • Re:Being Bullied Makes You A Target by Bryan Andersen (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:41PM
  • getting things done by BlightX (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:43PM
  • Why not just lock up the jocks? by WillAffleck (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @12:44PM
  • News and Help for geeks. Stuff That matters. by brianm9 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:46PM
  • Re:NSA Application by MikeJ9919 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:47PM
  • This is sick by Anth_ (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @12:54PM
  • I guess I'm one of the lucky ones... by ItsBacon (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:14PM
  • Regardless, It Takes Individuals (Re: goliard) by scaryjohn (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:15PM
  • Re:hmm... by Felius (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:21PM
  • Re:Making a difference: a Question to Slashdot by xcjohn (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:23PM
  • Re:What's on the net... by Invidious (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:26PM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by skeurto (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:28PM
  • The FBI ought to know better... by harpwolf (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:33PM
  • I'm guilty by Jovock (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:33PM
  • If you can't beat em -- Leave em! by rabababoa (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:33PM
  • Update on Alberta shooting by Trickster Coyote (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @01:35PM
  • Re:So... now what? by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:05PM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Amphigory (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @02:09PM
  • Those who sit in judgement by Bigdom (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:10PM
  • You have a chance... by Eg0r (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:14PM
  • Re:What's on the net... by imperfect being (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:16PM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by daala (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:20PM
  • 100% by pest (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:26PM
  • Re:This IS scary by burito (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:26PM
  • Educators != Teachers by jaed (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:27PM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by odaiwai (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @02:30PM
  • Still here in Aus. by Suit (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:38PM
  • Re:That's the point by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:43PM
  • Re:Bullying by SpazAttak (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:43PM
  • Another indicator by Ungrounded Lightning (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @02:47PM
  • Re:They don't sit you down and ask... by pest (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @02:50PM
  • Re:Hmm, let's innocent... by ronfar (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:02PM
  • my principal is a stupid ass by renegade187 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:07PM
  • Re:The Profile Fits! by Obelisk (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:08PM
  • Re:Bullying by stonecypher (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:26PM
  • Re:Bullying by holt (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:26PM
  • aahh (OT) by Wah (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:27PM
  • I already do. by elfbabe (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:30PM
  • What I'm not seeing here. by GreyFauk (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @03:40PM
  • Re:Here are my results by mpost4 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:25PM
  • Re:What I'm not seeing here. by holt (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:30PM
  • Geek Inquistion by cornpone (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:51PM
  • Re:This is actually kind of scary... Kind of??? by Slur (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @04:57PM
  • Re:Don't blame the educators.. by holt (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:14PM
  • Re:Bullying by Susano (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @05:16PM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Johnw52 (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:07PM
  • I volounteer by kspett (Score:2) Monday November 29 1999, @06:14PM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by CConkle (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:32PM
  • Re:Love is the solution-everything else is a band- by fungy (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:37PM
  • Re:Bullying not the problem by Trepalium (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:38PM
  • Re: US Constitution by rodent (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @06:39PM
  • Re:escape to Canada - we /like/ people with brains by Pope (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:11PM
  • Re:Recovery from profiling damage? by rodentia (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:13PM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by eksos (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @07:37PM
  • by _outcat_ (111636) on Monday November 29 1999, @07:58PM (#1497563) Homepage Journal
    Usually boys of average or above-average intelligence. I'm 17 and not a guy...but they told me my IQ is over 150, so, perhaps I fit somewhat this description...

    Often loners, or have small circle of friend who are outsiders.Well, yes, that fits me pretty well. I geek about with a bunch of techies.

    Experience unstable self-esteem. Don't you find it ironic that the greatest thinkers of all time question everything and are often in turmoil? Freedom comes with a price; freedom from being a sheep is no exception.

    Often fascinated by cults, Satanism, weapons, themes of violence and death. I am a Christian, but that doesn't mean I don't want to learn about what other people are thinking. I did a term report last year on several different worldviews. As for weapons? There's nothing wrong with hosing down a dead monitor with gasoline and trying to ignite something by firing BB's at it. It's geeky and cool, and doesn't hurt anyone. Death? Death is part of life.

    Experience a decline in schoolwork and marks. Decline since when? Not that I know of.

    Come from dysfunctional homes. Both sides of my family have manic depression. Enough said.

    Have experience with chronic bullying and drug use.Again, which end of the bullying are we talking about here? As for drugs, I suppose I do try to get caffeine pills and Mountain Dew from my older friends (who happen to have money...) ;]


    Engage in attention-seeking behavior, and don't accept criticism. I accept criticism from those who have credibility. As for attention-seeking, the trenchcoat, chains, and (formerly, regrettably) purple hair are not blantant attempts at getting attention. As a geek girl I'd say that the cheerleaders who come to school in tight jeans and midriff tanktops get a lot more "attention" than I do. But they are encouraged because it's NORMAL.

    There comes a point when one becomes self aware. If no one else around you is self aware, you are faced with no other choice but to break off, to become free from them in any way you can. For me, it happened when I was 10 and my mother had a stroke. None of my classmates at the time thought much more about anything than sleepovers, sports, and hairstyles. While they were talking about their new Jonathan Taylor Thomas posters, I was boiling inside, everything I believed on the brink of shattering.

    And I'm told by my principal and teachers that I'm just trying to get attention when I dress differently.

    No.

    I broke off from the norm years ago because the norm would not listen to me. I did what I had to; being on the "outside" is now a part of me. You can dress me in Tommy Hilfiger or Gap or whatever; you can dye my hair blonde, you can wedge my feet into tiny sandals and take away my computer; but you cannot change who I am.

    Who does this hurt and why? It hurts everyone involved. Families, the geeks themselves, and eventually the world might be missing out on some of the greatest minds of all time. And why? Because the government legislates that some things are OK for some, while others aren't.

    I'm not trying to promote religious jihad here..there are enough flames on Slashdot as it is. I'm saying that in order for people to function without chaos, there must be a set of absolute rules. Not this pseudo-bureaucracy, not anarchy, not communism--we've been shown already that they don't work.

    I simply cannot understand why anyone here would complain about this injustice done to geeks, yet flame anyone citing possible good in posting the Ten Commandments at a school. Absolutes sound mightily good right now to me. I know I'm tired of being at the short end of the administrative stick.

    Just my $.02.
  • Re:So... now what? by madbadger (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:22PM
  • We _should_ note those obsessed with violence... by Porno Queen (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:24PM
  • good schools by parvati (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @08:28PM
  • The Future by eksos (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:11PM
  • Are they looking for brains? by ubi (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:27PM
  • school profiling possibly better idea..? by eksos (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @09:47PM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Generation (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:02PM
  • Re: Profiling does not equal love! by RenHoek (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:38PM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by Pertinax (Score:1) Monday November 29 1999, @10:50PM
  • Re:So when is Hellmouth 7 coming out? by arcade (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @12:27AM
  • Re:Hmm, let's innocent... by Skraggy (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @02:01AM
  • Re:control by smugfunt (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @02:02AM
  • Re:Nah, we get their fast food and thats about it by Skraggy (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @02:19AM
  • Re:OK, so a geek fits the profile... now what? by shanerw (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @02:24AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by Kintanon (Score:2) Tuesday November 30 1999, @02:48AM
  • Dear Mr. Katz by SkipRosebaugh (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @02:59AM
  • Re:Bullying by Rabbins (Score:2) Tuesday November 30 1999, @03:40AM
  • Re:Geek Testing for fun and profit? by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @03:45AM
  • Re:You truly need help by rm-r (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @03:58AM
  • Re:Serial killers, while at it? by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @04:12AM
  • Re:Making a difference: a Question to Slashdot by Shadowmist (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @04:55AM
  • Re:Well, that's me. by Shadowmist (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @05:20AM
  • Re:hmm... by Shadowmist (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @05:24AM
  • Re:Serial killers, while at it? by Enoch Root (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @06:48AM
  • Re:What's on the net... by slambo (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @06:54AM
  • Staying with the Herd... by slambo (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @07:35AM
  • Re:I volounteer by Q*bert (Score:2) Tuesday November 30 1999, @09:10AM
  • Bloomingtonians represent ;) (OFF-TOPIC; DEAL) by Q*bert (Score:2) Tuesday November 30 1999, @09:38AM
  • Sociopath defined by Q*bert (Score:2) Tuesday November 30 1999, @10:23AM
  • Re:Serial killers, while at it? by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @10:57AM
  • false analogy, mixed metaphore by twitter (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @10:59AM
  • Re:Slappy JoJo by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @11:12AM
  • Re:Comments on the "areas" by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @11:23AM
  • Re:So... now what? by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @11:37AM
  • Re:Why so many problems in the US? by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @11:53AM
  • Re:Depends on how this information is being used.. by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @12:01PM
  • Re:Hmm by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @12:06PM
  • Persons who probably fit this profile by Trump (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @12:19PM
  • Re:false analogy, mixed metaphore by Mr. Slippery (Score:2) Tuesday November 30 1999, @04:42PM
  • LAST POST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! by gammatron (Score:1) Tuesday November 30 1999, @05:47PM
  • Re:Serial killers, while at it? by Enoch Root (Score:1) Wednesday December 01 1999, @02:05AM
  • Re:Hmm by Powers (Score:1) Wednesday December 01 1999, @03:12AM
  • Not Quite (Re:Shades of _Enders Game_?) by David Gould (Score:2) Wednesday December 01 1999, @02:17PM
  • Re:Serial killers, while at it? by Kent in Omaha (Score:1) Thursday December 02 1999, @08:11AM
  • Gee, does this mean I am dangerous? -> Take the FB by proudhawk (Score:1) Friday December 10 1999, @02:16PM
  • 183 replies beneath your current threshold.
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