Do you then disagree with driver's licenses for kids 16, 17, and 18
Do you disagree with laws that allow parents to leave children at home alone if they are 10 and older?
Do you have an explanation as to why someone over 18 years old, the age of majority and the age in which one is legally allowed to cast a vote and legally allowed to sign up for the military or enter a contract without parental permission, were arrested? (Brandi Ratliff, 18. Kris Karsteter, 21. Kyesa Scott, 18. Emily Demmler, 19. Jerome Williams, 19.)
The only person in that article that we know for *sure* was arrested that was under age was Soneary Sy's son, who was a 17 year old straight A student. There was nothing presented other than one young woman's report that there "appeared to be" kids as young as fourteen, and one as young as 10. The people that we do know were arrested were older teens and young adults of the legal age of majority in a public place, and some who had patronized that public place and spent money in the places of business that took their money and then allowed them to be arrested.
That's what we do know from that article. And if, as you say, the article was light on facts and therefor none of us should be making judgments, I fail to see where you are getting your facts to support your theories.
The facts, as I see them, is that older teens and young adults were arrested in a public place without a warning to leave on the request of a company that has a policy of allowing loitering by the elderly. The article said the Houston PD "arrested about 425 people for criminal trespassing, a misdemeanor" - not for curfew violations. The stores would have had to press trespassing charges against the youths, all 425, as this was a public parking lot and not a private place.
How you can come to the conclusion that the Houston PPD was right is beyond me, but your assertion that there isn't enough information in there to make a judgment is *really* beyond me.
Re: Woah... Before you judge the parents...
Date: 2002-08-27 10:35 am (UTC)Do you then disagree with driver's licenses for kids 16, 17, and 18
Do you disagree with laws that allow parents to leave children at home alone if they are 10 and older?
Do you have an explanation as to why someone over 18 years old, the age of majority and the age in which one is legally allowed to cast a vote and legally allowed to sign up for the military or enter a contract without parental permission, were arrested? (Brandi Ratliff, 18. Kris Karsteter, 21. Kyesa Scott, 18. Emily Demmler, 19. Jerome Williams, 19.)
The only person in that article that we know for *sure* was arrested that was under age was Soneary Sy's son, who was a 17 year old straight A student. There was nothing presented other than one young woman's report that there "appeared to be" kids as young as fourteen, and one as young as 10. The people that we do know were arrested were older teens and young adults of the legal age of majority in a public place, and some who had patronized that public place and spent money in the places of business that took their money and then allowed them to be arrested.
That's what we do know from that article. And if, as you say, the article was light on facts and therefor none of us should be making judgments, I fail to see where you are getting your facts to support your theories.
The facts, as I see them, is that older teens and young adults were arrested in a public place without a warning to leave on the request of a company that has a policy of allowing loitering by the elderly. The article said the Houston PD "arrested about 425 people for criminal trespassing, a misdemeanor" - not for curfew violations. The stores would have had to press trespassing charges against the youths, all 425, as this was a public parking lot and not a private place.
How you can come to the conclusion that the Houston PPD was right is beyond me, but your assertion that there isn't enough information in there to make a judgment is *really* beyond me.