
Sure, the lunkhead parents of the Ipswich boys lacrosse players who were suspended for smoking graduation cigars (see dastardly photo above) missed an opportunity to teach their kids some “life lessons” about integrity, as the Globe’s Matt Porter writes. But didn’t other adults miss an opportunity to teach “life lessons” too, such as adult school authorities making punishments proportionate to alleged crimes/rule breaking? That one-strike-and-you’re-out approaches to justice aren’t always the smart way to go? That it’s important for court judges, school administrators and other adult authorities to show a modicum of common-sense flexibility (otherwise known as ‘mercy’) when enforcing rules involving teens? … In the Ipswich case, isn’t there a difference between teens developing bad lifetime habits by regularly smoking butts and kids smoking one-time celebratory cigars on a beach after high-school graduation? Isn’t the former what the MIAA rule is all about, not the latter? … What puritanical dummies. …
Btw: You know who comes out of this absurd controversy looking pretty good? The Ipswich lacrosse players who sat out the game in solidarity with their suspended teammates, forcing the team’s playoff forfeiture. They showed adults a late-in-life lesson about standing up to stupid rules and punishments. …
Photo above of Ipswich criminals students via CBS News.

