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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 08:38 AMdear folks, i read about a mother who called the police on her child, i think it was a 6 year old for shop lifting.. |
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Randy54156
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 02:28 PMin todays time....No! |
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 03:12 PMdear randy, thanks for answerin.. and merry christmas to you.. i hope you have a really good one.. |
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Tarasye
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 04:17 PMAbsolutely. Children need to learn and know there are consequences for their actions. I believe the very fact my daughter knew I was willing and able to make that call if necessary is part of what kept her in check. I think the fact that if she ended up in jail because of her actions, knowing I would not be bailing her out, forced her to check her own accountability. She will even admit that to this day, now that she is a young adult of 22 years old. |
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spri1458
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 07:27 PMIt depends on the crime and the age of the child, among other possible things. I can't tackle every angle and situation, but here is my basic train of thought: |
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bcpianogal
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 08:07 PMI remember a story about a friend of mine who tried to take a pack of gum from the grocery store. She told me that she didn't realize that she was "stealing" because she figured her mom would pay for it along with the other groceries. She was pretty young, maybe 4 or 5, so I can understand that. Anyway, her mom caught her before she even got it in her pocket, told her that taking gum like that was stealing, and made her confess to the store manager. Her mom asked what my friend could do (other than returning the gum, which was a given) to "pay" for her "crime," and the manager said that 5 minutes of bagging her own family's groceries would suffice. I know that left quite an impression on my friend...both the stealing part and the mercy of the manager who could have been really quite mean and ugly about it. |
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 24 Dec, 2009 10:37 PMI work with inmates that are transitioning back into society. It's a half-way house run by a Church here in Ft.Lauderdale. 80% of our"clients" grew up with out a father. None of them knew any dicipline as a child. They had no boundaries -- no direction -- they felt nobody loved them because nobody cared enough to discipline them. |
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DontHitThatMark
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 25 Dec, 2009 05:08 PMHmm....a 6 year-old kid...not sure I would call the police. As a parent it'd be your job to discipline the child. Parents should make sure their kids know very early on that they have the authority. So...maybe punish the child, make them return the item and pay for it....but I'm not a parent so...:goofball:.. |
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Tarasye
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 26 Dec, 2009 06:06 AMRight on Arch, I couldn't agree more. Follow through is everything, never say something you are not prepared to do. |
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 26 Dec, 2009 08:03 AMMy mother caught my brother stealing a paack of gum as a 6 year old.She marched him back in the store and made him confess to the store manger.He was crying the whole time.It is good to give a kid limits.It also depends on the kid and crime as to how far I would go.I have no kids. |
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crime, would you turn your child in?Posted : 26 Dec, 2009 09:53 AMGood point Tara! |
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