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Edited on Fri Jan-09-04 03:18 AM by JDWalley
About a week before Christmas, Olearcek said the couple's 10-year-old son, who has flight simulation software and is keenly interested in learning to fly like his parents, commented that he'd have to wait until his dad retired to learn to fly by instruments. She went to Staples soon after and took her son to the office supply store, where he looked through the available software.
"He was disappointed because there was military stuff, but it was all fighting stuff, so I asked the clerk, and he was alarmed by us asking how to fly airplanes and said that was against the law," Olearcek said. "I said I couldn't imagine that, but, because (the clerk) was a little on edge ... I left." But "what saves us, is people are paying attention," she said.
Staples' spokesperson Sharyn Frankel said the employees were doing what they have been told to do.
"After 9/11, our store associates were instructed that if they see something suspicious or out of the ordinary, they're to contact their managers and local authorities," Frankel said. "It's all about keeping our associates and customers safe and this was out of the ordinary and kind of raised a red flag and they did what they thought was right."
So they all thought it's O.K...I sure the *$#^ don't!
I think it's time for a boycott of Staples. Don't you?
:grr:
ON EDIT: I still don't see any reason for a ten-year-old boy, with his mother, just before Christmas, asking to see Microsoft Flight Simulator to be suspected of terrorism. My only clue is the family name: it's Eastern European. I'm wondering if, to the paranoid clerk, they may have looked somewhat "dark-skinned"...a bit "Arabic," perhaps? Of course, "we all know" how Arabs, not having the Respect For Human Life that Enlightened Westerners like ourselves have, willingly send their children off to death as terrorist "homicide bombers." Maybe the clerk thought that this possibly-Arab family was grooming their son for an imminant re-enactment of 9/11?
:crazy:
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