I'm 59. If my parents raised me today the way they raised me back in the 50's and 60's they'd be arrested.
Case in point
Case in point
CPS is allowed to take children without a court document of some kind? There's a law that needs to be fixed.
From the info in the article, I don't think this would constitute an immediate or dire threat. I'm not saying you're saying it is, just that I don't think CPS would reasonably reach that level here based on available info.IIRC, CPS can remove children from a home temporarily, on their own judgment, if it's a situation with immediate and dire threat. While I'm not wild about CPS overreach in general, that seems like a reasonable position.
I'm sure there is a time limit after which there has to be a court order or the children have to go back.
From the info in the article, I don't think this would constitute an immediate or dire threat. I'm not saying you're saying it is, just that I don't think CPS would reasonably reach that level here based on available info.
a review found there actually were a lot of checks on CPS' ability act.
As a current foster parent, I won't comment on my experiences. But there certainly are a lot of challenging situations these folks deal with and they tend to have very heavy case loads and can't give as much attention to cases as you'd like to see. There are cases here in AZ and other places I've read about, both where lots of visits were made, or the case didn't get the attention it should have and visits weren't made, or somehow a situation didn't come to the attention of CPS when it should have. Tough stuff and tragic what happens to some of these kids.I understand. I was responding to the quote about CPS being enabled to act without a court document, not about the case at hand.
When I lived in MA (late 80s) there was at least one (and I think more than one) high profile case where CPS made repeated visits to a home and, despite evaluating the situation as dangerous, either did not try or were not able to secure a judge's order, and in the interim the child died from abuse. Everybody then proceeded to go bonkers and a review found there actually were a lot of restrictions on CPS' ability to act. I am therefore always a little suspicious when people trot out the idea that the Orwellian CPS is going to steal your children in the dead of night because you didn't make them salute your wall-height framed photo of Fuhrer Obama or somesuch.
I also had a lot of contact with CPS during my time as a foster parent because of some rather unsavory aspects of the child's former home. The people who actually did the CPS grunt work always struck me as extremely aware of the destabilization of families caused by any intervention they did, or even their very presence, and bent over backwards to follow the rules and not overreact. Anecdotal and inadmissible as evidence of larger social forces, of course, but that predisposes me to view them favorably.
As a current foster parent, I won't comment on my experiences.
I think this passage is key:I'm 59. If my parents raised me today the way they raised me back in the 50's and 60's they'd be arrested.
Case in point
So much of our built environment in the US, especially in areas that experienced their greatest growth after WWII and particularly areas that were built up since the 1980s, is designed with the idea in mind that people use cars to get everywhere: sprawling neighborhoods with lots of cul-de-sacs and few through streets make it inconvenient or impossible for people to get around on foot or by bicycle. So I think the mother's point cuts both ways. On the one hand, through sheer force of math, an environment where everybody drivers everywhere is going to lead to more traffic crashes and more traffic fatalities, and keeping yourself and your children out of this environment mitigates this problem, even if just infinitesimally. On the other hand, in an environment where everybody drives everywhere, drivers aren't accustomed to seeing pedestrians or cyclists and don't know the appropriate way to drive in order to protect street users without the benefit of a metal cage around them (giving enough room when passing cyclists, yielding to crossing pedestrians when turning, etc). This is a problem even here in NYC where pedestrians are everywhere, so I can only imagine how bad it is in, say, the suburbs of Atlanta or Houston. So by letting your kids walk home from the playground, you're exposing them to that risk instead.She [the mother who practices "free range parenting"] added: “Abductions are extremely rare. Car accidents are not. The number one cause of death for children of their age is a car accident.”
How much tin foil does it take to make one of those hats, anyway?The whole idea is that the concept of family is to be destroyed and children are to become property of government. Courtesy of the NWO.
He bought out the whole store.How much tin foil does it take to make one of those hats, anyway?
How much tin foil does it take to make one of those hats, anyway?
I'm 59. If my parents raised me today the way they raised me back in the 50's and 60's they'd be arrested.
Looking at the results, they probably should have been arrested.![]()