T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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259.1 | Abduction is cause for concern | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Fri Aug 10 1990 13:41 | 23 |
| Geez, y'all must not live anywhere near Texas!!!!!!! In the last year alone
I have watched (through the media) over 20 cases of children being harmed
while walking to school. In a few cases it was random drive-by shootings, and
in others it was gang shootings. In still others the kids were abducted and
harmed, raped, and at least two were killed, but I think even more. One of the
ones killed was a 14-yr-old girl walking to school alone - the guy who raped
and killed her was out because of a paperwork mistake, and had many other
violent crimes including murder.
And then there are those "snuff movies" (sp?) that I keep seeing in the media,
and people will steal kids and get a good sum for them, for these movies.
Maybe I'm overcautious, but I don't consider it a rathole to be concerned about
strangers abducting children. While it is *more common* for a parent to
abduct the child, it is not UNCOMMON for strangers to do it. In fact, it's
probably more common than many of the diseases or abnormalities we often
discuss in this conference!
I don't think I will ever let Kati walk to school, except in a large (4 or more)
group of kids - assuming all other conditions (streets, guards, neighborhood,
weather) were right....
Kristen
|
259.2 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Fri Aug 10 1990 15:04 | 10 |
| Kristen,
You make me glad I live even further North than most of the noters
here ... I'm up in Canada ... and maybe ONCE a year we hear of
the luring car driver ... the kids, schools, police and parents are
so on top of these things that they might harras a kid once ... the
next attempt usually fails and the guy is caught!
Stuart
|
259.3 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Aug 13 1990 10:38 | 42 |
| Kristen - (.6) if you can document what you say, please do so. It
strikes me, in the meantime, as irresponsible urban myth. I doubt that
there have been 20 cases of rape, murder or abduction committed against
children walking to school in the ENTIRE United States, in the ENTIRE
last decade. I would bet kids are at least THOUSANDS of times more
likely to be injured or killed being driven to school. The two cases
in greater Boston recently that I think of involving kids killed on the
way to school both were caused by their being run over by their school
bus (not that this is statistically meaningful, either).
I spent some time in the library after reading this entry looking for
relevant facts in Statistical Abstract of the United States and similar
sources, and they do not support this concern at all. There are LOTS
of cases of "children being harmed," but they are NOT rape, murder, or
abduction by strangers. The subtantial majority of child abuse is
committed by the kids' own white 31.5 year old mothers (and most of the
rest by their fathers); crimes of the type you suggest are so
insignificant they are not even tallied.
At the height of the "child abduction" hysteria a few years back, some
group (I'm afraid I don't remember the name) tried to pin down the
frequency of stranger abduction. They first found that none of the
organizations that had sprung up to combat this "epidemic" had any
evidence that it existed. They had to start from scratch, surveying
state and local police statistics. They could find almost no examples
that could fit this category, something under half a dozen in the
country over several years. Cases of child snatching aren't completely
insignificant, statistically, but almost all are committed by estranged
parents with custody disputes, and are quickly solved. Of course, the
very few exceptions tend to get enormous and long lasting publicity, so
people can get a very false impression.
It is, of course, a tragedy when a child is traumatized or killed by
any cause, however unlikely, whether kidnapping or choking on food X.
But the shock value of a particular incident is usually a poor guide to
where our children really need our protective attention.
If you have real evidence, please share it. If I and the studies I
have consulted are wrong, I very much want to know it, and start
acting and arguing on the other side.
- Bruce
|
259.4 | Have you seen these children?? | NEURON::REEVES | | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:46 | 6 |
| Re: .9
Can you then explain why there are _SO_ many missing children, I
receive dozens of pictures a week and have always thought these were
true statics???
Not trying to cause trouble just would like some answers.
|
259.5 | | NEURON::REEVES | | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:47 | 2 |
| re. .10
That should be statistics not statics. Sorry.
|
259.6 | assuming you see the same fliers I do... | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Aug 13 1990 12:19 | 6 |
| re: .10
If you look at the fine print on those, you'll find that most of
them were abducted by a parent.
--bonnie
|
259.7 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Aug 13 1990 12:19 | 15 |
| .10 > Can you then explain why there are _SO_ many missing children?
How many missing children do you think there are?
I won't try to comment directly, since I don't know what "dozens of
pictures a week" you receive. What kind of mail is this? I fairly
often receive bulk mail advertisements with a "missing kid" notice on
one side. A brand of milk I sometimes get has similar things. It
appears to be a quite small number of pictures being circulated over
and over. I often notice, for example that a picture of a "missing" 5
year old is dated from, say, 1984. They are also very rarely from my
part of the country. It is also possible that some (many?) stay in
circulation long after the kid turns up.
- Bruce
|
259.8 | I guess I receive too much bulk mail | NEURON::REEVES | | Mon Aug 13 1990 12:27 | 8 |
| Thanks for the information, I do receive the bulk mail advertisements
and have noticed that the date missing is usually a year or two
earlier. I know they don't tell you, the circumstances on why these
kids are missing so just assumed they were abducted by strangers, I
just finished reading an article on missing children and was surprized
by the number that are abducted by parents, but was most surprized by
the number abducted by grandparents.
|
259.9 | | MCIS2::WALTON | | Tue Aug 14 1990 09:49 | 21 |
| Bruce has a very good point here. There is no statistical evidence
that stranger abduction is on the rise. There are a few, very visible
cases. For example, Joseph Wetterling (the young boy abducted while
his brother and friend were allowed to go free) and the two people (one
a young boy and the other an older teenage girl) whos picture was found
at a roadside gas station/market. Other than these types of very well
publicised (sp) situations, stranger abduction is very rare compared to
family abduction and runaways.
RE: The snuff films..
As is has been said in other notesfiles, there is VERY little evidence
to support the myth of "Snuff Films". I can't recall the file right
now (I will find it today and post a pointer), but the gist of it is
that there have been exhaustive efforts to procure one of these films
and *No* law enforcment agency has been able to come up with one.
Until there is veryifiable evidence (i.e. an actual film) I tend to
believe that these are an myth born out of very small seeds of fact.
Sue
|
259.10 | Have they found him? | DISCVR::GILMAN | | Tue Aug 14 1990 15:48 | 12 |
| I can't believe that knowing the things that go on in the World that
NO snuff films exist. They may very well be far less common than we
are led to believe (at least I hope they are less common) but some
must surely exist.
There was a case in the "Midwest" a year or so ago when a boy was
abducted and his friend and can't remember if his brother was along
too was taken at gunpoint. The last I heard they hadn't found the
boy in spite of an intense hunt for him. Maybe that was the Joe
Watterling? case but they name doesn't strike me as the same. Does
anyone know if the boy has been found? I sure hope he has been found
alive and unharmed.
|
259.11 | Some info on numbers | CLOSET::VAXUUM::LOWELL | Grim Grinning Ghosts... | Tue Aug 14 1990 17:22 | 13 |
| I recently read an article that discussed the numbers of missing
children - I think it was in The Boston Globe. I can't remember
the exact details but the agency responsible for maintaining the
information feels the method of reporting it is misleading. If I
remember correctly, they report the total number of missing
children which includes: runaways; children who have been kicked
out of their homes; children who have been abducted by parents and
other relatives; children abducted by strangers; etc.. The agency
wants to change the reports to show the categories.
According to the article, a member of the family is aware of the
child's location in most cases and there are very few cases of
abductions by strangers.
|
259.12 | Let's hope this year is better... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Wed Aug 15 1990 10:51 | 14 |
| re: .all
Cut Kristen a little slack here. During the last school year, there have been
a rash of abductions of school kids here in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area. One man
has been charged with 3 or 4 of the abductions and found innoncent of one of
those. There also appears to be a man who is going into little girls bedrooms
through unlocked windows and raping them.
On the other hand, Kristen, remember that most abductions are by people whom
the victim or victims family know. If you recall the case of the Arlington
girl who was about Nicole's age, who was raped and murdered, the criminal was
a friend of the victim's family.
Bob
|
259.13 | Research projects? | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Wed Aug 15 1990 14:04 | 32 |
| Bruce,
If you like to research these things, the case that is most prominent in my
mind is the Amy Lynn Thatcher case that was recently tried here (she was
14 and was raped and killed while walking to school - by a stranger). From
that case a few other similar cases were referred or brought up, so I'm sure
if you find that one, it may lead to others.
Also, on the show Unsolved Mysteries there was the case of the 3-yr-old who
is missing, and some evidence (what? I don't know) makes them think that a
snuff movie is involved. Both parents are around, so I doubt it is either of
them. They have replayed that show a few times so my guess is that she has not
been found. Also, I have never tried to verify the validity of the stories on
that show, but they always convince *me* that they are true!
In 1983 my very close friend was approached while leaving a President's, by
a stranger. He wanted her to accompany him to the top floor (which was empty)
and she refused. He stabbed her several times on the legs, arm, neck, and
through her liver puncturing her lung. She lived, fortunately. He was on
parole and had 6 previous violent crimes, most involving children. This was in
Houston, but I'm not sure how much data you will find because she settled with-
out a trial for 30 years, to avoid the stress of the trial. He will be released
this year.
I don't clip the newspaper articles but if you are genuinely interested I can
start - it really is not THAT uncommon around here. And the story Bob mentioned
about the neighborhood in Dallas IS TRUE - I have friends who live in that
neighborhood and it is very prominent. However, this guy only strikes at
night (usually Sat. night) and has not killed anyone, just fondled little girls.
Happy researching!
Kristen
|
259.14 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Aug 15 1990 14:58 | 35 |
| Kristen -
A friend of mine and his immediate family were wiped out in a
commercial plane crash when I was in junior high. A couple of years
later another friend's mother was killed by lightening on vacation in
Colorado. But fortunately I can still feel comfortable when flying,
even on the way to Colorado mountains.
The question is not the occurance of tragic events, but their
prevelance, and the degree to which we should reshape our lives around
them. There is also some disagreement about standards of evidence.
Unsolved Mysteries makes money by broadcasting nonsense, just as the
National Enquirer makes money by printing it. These are entertainment,
not sources of reliable information about the world.
August being a slow news month, the Boston Globe (a pretty
straight-laced, serious paper) ran a story itself yesterday about some
still "unsolved mysteries" in New England over the last decade. One
was a reprise on the case of Sarah Pryor, who vanished without trace
from Wayland, Mass. in 1985. It was a tragic and striking case, and
extremely heavily publicised for years, as any similar case would be.
But what is also striking is its rarity. I believe there has been no
remotely similar case in New England since, nor can I remember any like
it in the last couple of decades. To oversimplify, it is the exception
that proves the rule that kids (at least around here) are not murdered
or abducted by strangers.
All this being said, possibly even believed, I don't expect everybody or
anybody to abandon their "irrational fears." I certainly haven't.
But I know no parents, myself included, who don't err on the side of
being MORE worried about such things than they should be. Better
overworried than underworried, but don't encourage us to get even
worse.
- Bruce
|
259.15 | Why? | DISCVR::GILMAN | | Wed Aug 15 1990 17:09 | 12 |
| Why is it 'always' a guy who grabs kids? One rarely hears of a woman
who stalks and drags kids into her car and then 'rapes' them. Is
my question academic? I don't think so because if we are looking for
causes/motivation for the individual commiting this type of crime then
the sex of the offender seems to matter in that it 'always' seems to be
a man. "Who cares what the motivation is, just hang them". If we take
this attitude we fix the problem AFTER it happens and some kid is
already hurt or dead. If we can understand the causes and motivation
perhaps we can spot individuals who are likely to do this sort of thing
BEFORE they do it and help them NOT to do it. Also, being a man I don't
like being automatically associated (by gender) with people who DO that
sort of thing.
|
259.16 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Wed Aug 15 1990 17:19 | 18 |
| re .21
Interesting observation Jeff ....
I must admit, I'd never noticed it before ... it's probably something
we have to thank the sexual psychology researchers for, since they
have reckoned that on average men think far more about sexual things
than women ... therefore there must be a higher proportion of men
who are likely to perform sexually driven abductions and other such
horrors.
On the other hand, have you ever noticed that baby snatchers tend to be
predominantly women, particularly women who desparately want a baby and
cannot have one for one reason or another ?
I wonder how much of this is stereotyping and how much is fact ?
Stuart
|
259.17 | agree with Kristen | VFOVAX::TYSON | Sandy Tyson @vfo | Wed Aug 15 1990 23:56 | 30 |
| I had a similar reaction as Kristen to the base note. I lived in
a planned community No. VA (Burke Centre) which felt very safe to
me. During one school year a number of girls and boys were
sexually assaulted walking to elementary school (1988). Many
parents in my community began demanding school buses for all
elementary school children. Also, not far from there, Rosie (age
9?) was stolen off of her bike in broad day light around this
time last year. She was found the next day raped and dead. At
Christmas time 1989, Melissa Brannen (age 4?) was abducted from a
Christmas party in No. VA. The Melissa Brannen case was shown on
Unsolved Mysteries or America's Most Wanted (can't remember which
show) and the presentation appeared to be factually accurate and not
sensationalized. Melissa has not be found and her mother still
has her Christmas presents wrapped hoping she is returned alive.
Northern Virginia is not know for high crime, but these recent
incidents would make me think real hard before I let a 6-8 year
old walk to school alone. Even the older kids aren't safe. A
young teen ager was riding his dirt bike in some woods in No. VA a
couple of months ago and was murdered by a stranger. It turns out
that wasn't the first kid this man had murdered. These problems
that have occurred in No. VA could be a statistical anomalie, but
they seem to have affected the community.
I was a bit reluctant to comment on this issue because of a
traumatic incident that I went through in 1973 in No. VA. I came
very close to being raped by a stranger in a high school parking
lot during the middle of the day and have been extra cautious ever
since. To this day, I carry a referees whistle on my key chain.
Part of the reason I chose to live in that Burke (1987) was the safety
factor, statistically speaking.
|
259.18 | of course it happens, but | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Aug 16 1990 09:32 | 29 |
| I don't think any of us are saying that there aren't cases of
children being kidnapped, raped, or murdered. And obviously some
neighborhoods are not as safe as others, and a psychotic serial
criminal can happen anywhere. You have to know your own
neighborhood. In Burke Center, I would probably be escorting my
kid to the front door of the school.
But for every one of these tragic crimes that are extensively
covered by the media, there are almost a hundred kids abducted by
friends or family members. There are several hundred raped and
abused by friends or family members. Very few of those cases ever
make the evening news.
So yes, we have to take reasonable precautions against the likely
threats to our children. But if we're focussing on the fear that
they might get kidnapped on the way to school (well, yes, they
might, and I might be in a fatal traffic accident on the way home
from work tonight, too), and neglecting the other kinds of
dangers, we're putting our fingers in the dike while the flood is
pouring over the top.
--bonnie
p.s. I'm looking for a copy of the government report that has the
actual numbers for the last four years; it's only been out for a
few days and it isn't at the library yet. I'll post it as soon as
I find it.
|
259.19 | Let's just agree to disagree on this one! | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Thu Aug 16 1990 10:40 | 28 |
|
Well I hope that we can agree to disagree on this matter.
Bruce has a point about other dangers (flying, driving, etc.) - I still take
Kati on airplanes, and drive her in my car, despite some of the statistics.
I also try to reduce the chance of our being one of the statistics by using
a carseat, driving more carefully with her, driving DEFENSIVELY with her,
choosing my air travel, etc.....But there are things I don't do because of my
own perceived sense of the danger - and I will call it UNNECESSARY DANGER
(driving and flying are considered necessary to me).
I choose not to keep her away from either of her parents, I happen to know
and trust them both. I choose to not keep her away from MOST family members
as I also know and trust them - there are some I am cautious of, and will
probably never leave her alone with. And to reduce the risk of abuse by any
of them I plan to educate her about abuse and never "force" her to hug/kiss/etc.
any of them she is uncomfortable with.
I guess my position is that I will try to reduce the risks that are
unavoidable. For those risks that I consider too great, or unnecessary, I
plan to eliminate them (like not letting her walk to school - it just isn't
necessary and I consider the risk too high. I'm not comparing to abduction in
any other case - family, friends, etc. - I just look at abduction in THIS case
and see too many.). As keeps coming out in this conference, you have to do
what YOU think is right as a parent, and take responsibility for your decisions
and their consequences.
Kristen
|
259.20 | Even one is a sad commentary | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Thu Aug 16 1990 10:48 | 7 |
| What a sad state of affairs this world is in. I just read this morning
about innocent children of shooting who happen to be in the wrong place
at the wrong time. One 3 year old was in his bed sleeping when a stray
bullet hit him and killed him. If this is the price of progress I'd
rather push a plow.
Mike
|
259.21 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Thu Aug 16 1990 11:41 | 9 |
| > -< Even one is a sad commentary >-
> at the wrong time. One 3 year old was in his bed sleeping when a stray
> bullet hit him and killed him. ....
And people get up tight at the thought of gun controls ? This is the major
reason, that in spite of many excellent opportunities I've had and got to
move to the US I will not. Guns do kill people ... this is a prime example.
Stuart
|
259.22 | *** Moderator Request *** | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Thu Aug 16 1990 11:49 | 8 |
| Please, Please, Please, let's not get into Gun control here. That is
definately not a parenting issue.
If you wish to discuss this, please take it to the Soapbox.
Tracey
Parenting Co-mod.
|
259.23 | Will it get better or worse? | DEMON::DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Thu Aug 16 1990 12:16 | 26 |
| re:.20
I agree...sometimes the cost of progress seems much too high. I'm sure
many of you can recall, as I can, the times when as kids we would hop
on our bikes for 5 or 10 mile jaunts to other towns, parks, ponds,
etc., and think nothing of being gone from early morning to early
evening. Or how about during good weather, going back out after dinner
for a 2 or 3 hour game of street hockey, or chase, or kick-the-can,
etc...I remember my mother's biggest concern was traffic, and not
whether some stranger was lurking for us...Nowadays, I know many
parents who restrict their kids to their own street, or even to their
fenced-in back yards, or wouldn't even consider letting those kids go
out to play after dinner. The sight of that has always saddened me,
yet I could understand the reasons for their action.
We now have a 10 mo.old son, and I don't know how we'll deal with the
situation when he's old enough to be outside playing by himself or with
friends. It's an issue that will require a lot of thought in the
meantime. My wife and I are from opposite end of the spectrum: I'm from
an area just outside Boston, and am relatively street-smart, while my
wife was raised in a rural-suburban area, and is more open & trusting
(almost naive...). I'm sure our reactions will fall somewhere in the
middle, but probably closer to my end...:^(
Freddie
|
259.24 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Aug 16 1990 12:23 | 12 |
| Tracey - (.22)
I normally manage without difficulty to restrain myself from
addressing gun control. But I stoutly protest your assertion
that it is definitely not a parenting issue. I would bet a substantial
sum that the number of children injured or killed by guns owned by
parents exceeds by at least a factor of 100 the number injured or
killed by stranger abduction and peanut butter choking combined.
Probably a factor of 1000. And gun tragedies are so much more easily
prevented!
- Bruce
|
259.25 | ex | MLCSSE::LANDRY | just passen' by...and goin' nowhere | Thu Aug 16 1990 12:34 | 14 |
|
I have opinions about gun control in association with kids, but
the base note wasn't meant for that so *I* won't go down a rat-hole!
It would be interesting, however, to see how many of us (DECies)
have been touched in some way by someone being murdered, raped,
etc., that we KNOW.
When I was in high school, a classmate was abducted and killed.
Her body was found, however to date, there has been nobody prosecuted
and it's still unsolved.
jean
|
259.26 | two murderers, three murder victims, two permanently missing persons, etc. | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Aug 16 1990 12:56 | 10 |
| re: .25
It would be a bit long to recount here. Life is more violent when
you grow up in an economically distressed area in economically
distressed times.
It's nice to live in a safe clean middle-class community where
there are only occasional incidents like this.
--bonnie
|
259.27 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | It's time for a summertime dream | Thu Aug 16 1990 13:18 | 16 |
| By way of comparison, having grown up in Canada and England, in
essentially comfortable "lower to middle class" (I hate the terms but
it's an understandable concept) neighbourhoods, I know of only two
people who died as a result of violence ... both doing VSO (voluntary
service overseas) ... one in a questionable circumstance "car accident"
and one while hitch-hiking ... circumstances unknown. One in Africa,
one in Haiti.
No rapes ... no other violent crimes ... no child abductions. This in
almost 40 years.
Do I lead a sheltered life ? Or have I just lived in the right places?
Stuart
|
259.28 | Clarification of mod request. | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Thu Aug 16 1990 14:08 | 14 |
| You'll note that I did not squash the note on gun classes for kids.
That indeed is a parenting issue. I would not squash a note on whether or
not parents should have guns in a house with children. I would not squash a
notes on how to make guns in a home with children safer (although I would
caution restraint in all these notes).
Gun control per se I consider an inappropriate issue to discuss in
this file.
If anyone would like to appeal this moderator ruling, SEND /MODERATORS
If there is an appeal, I will bow to the majority of the other moderators.
Tracey
Parenting co-mod.
|
259.29 | For your convenience... | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Thu Aug 16 1990 15:13 | 5 |
| To make it easier:
PEAR::SOAPBOX has two notes discussing gun control: 26 and 113.
Dick
|
259.30 | | MAMTS3::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Thu Aug 16 1990 17:24 | 16 |
| I guess the question which gets asked over and over in my head about
these issues: abduction, rape, abuse, murder, etc is what the hell is
wrong with these people and why do we make life so comfortable for
them when the victims have no (or a miniscule amount of) rights at all.
I guess this is another topic as well, but I think it is relevant to
parental concerns as we are all concerned what the future holds for our
kids and grandkids. I think swift and just punishment is the answer to
the crimes. I think we spend too much time saying this person is a
victim of circumstance. We say this when there are thousands of people
around who come from similar circumstances.
I'm with you Kristen. I may be over protective of my kids, but I'd
rather be safe then sorry in such uncertain times. It's allright to
say that it probably won't happen to you, until it does happen to you.
Mike
|
259.31 | Hang em high? | DISCVR::GILMAN | | Fri Aug 17 1990 10:24 | 45 |
| .30 Dave, I would like to see more emphacis on prevention of the
crimes in the first place. If we can prevent it we can save two
people. Both the child and the potential criminal. The child will
not have had the experience and the potential offender may be able to
be helped away from that sort of behavior. As the parent of a three
year old I am as frightend of the possibility of my child being a
victim as any parent. I catch myself thinking how much better it
would be to stop the crime before it happens than concentrating my
energy on revenge after it happens. I hear other parents saying
basically 'lets get these people if they do that to our children'.
Fine, but I don't ALSO hear lets try and figure out (as a society)
what conditions set individual up to develop into abusers etc.
I can't help wondering why this type of crime is increasing so much.
Simply saying 'hang em all' DOESN'T solve the basic problem which is
that these people are developing into abusers. I am not suggesting that
abusers are let off from their responsibility. I am suggesting that
the social conditions in the U.S. (emphacis on violence in movies, TV)
probably contributes to the development of abusers and as a society we
should realize that the general social environment is making
conditions ripe for people like this to develop. When we live in a
society which (AS A WHOLE) virtually worships violence and has
devaluated close knit communities, extended families, the value of the
individual, an emphacis on commercialism rather than a fullfilling well
rounded environment, and trains boys to become unfeeling unforgiving
rambos' we wonder why some men turn out to be criminals. I think the
wonder of it is that more don't become criminals.
I am not saying that the individual is not responsible for his/her
actions. Ten years ago our emphacis was on criminal rights, now
the emphacis seems to be on hang em high while we ignore the conditions
which contribute to people developing this way. I think that we should
do all three. Hold people responsible for their actions, decrease the
emphacis on violence and lack of respect for people while we try and
eliminate the social conditions which increae the likilihood of abusers
developing (there has been a little progress on that) and as parents
keep our guard up.
I may be perceived as a bleeding heart in my note here but I think we
must look further than the end of the nearest rope as THE "solution"
to child abuse and crime against children. Until we address both
sides of the issue in real and meaningful ways the U.S. is going to
continue to produce these people and we parents are going to be in a
never ending battle to save our children.
Ok, have at me for taking a position other than solely 'hang em high'.
|
259.32 | I agree, and you put it beautifully | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Aug 17 1990 10:43 | 3 |
| Jeff, I agree with you about 110%.
--bonnie
|
259.33 | I must be sheltered too, and I live in Mass | LDYBUG::BOMBARDIER | Wherever you go, there you are | Fri Aug 17 1990 11:11 | 33 |
|
Stuart,
I must also have led a very sheltered life, but not in Canada or in
England. I grew up in Boston .. Dorchester to be exact ... but moved
out 25 years ago, long before all the violence there now became
prevalent. Then we moved to a 'lower-to-middle-class' suburb of
Boston ...
... and having lived my 40 years in eastern Mass, I don't personally
know of anyone who was murdered, raped or abducted either (by a stranger,
that is). And no one I know does either (unless they've never mentioned
it). All I know is what I read in the paper. I live in Milford MA now,
and we just had an abduction that made national news. A five-year-old
girl was abducted by a friend of the family. She was located in
Florida by the TV show 'America's Most Wanted'. But it was not a stranger
who abducted her ... it was a friend of the family (actually, it's
suspected that the man who took her may be her biological father).
But I do agree that we have to protect our children as much as we can,
regardless of their ages. I have a daughter who will be entering
college next year, and I eliminated (unfortunately, because they are
great schools) both Northeastern and Boston University because of the
potential for violence in and around Boston. I wasn't worried about
abduction or even rape as much as a random drive-by shooting.
And I agree with previous notes that we have to punish offenders while
we try to solve the social problems which lead to their behavior, and
at the same time minimize the risk of danger to our children while not
making them paranoid to live. Pretty tricky to accomplish all of these.
Maybe someday ... ;-)
- Kathy
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259.34 | | MAMTS3::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Fri Aug 17 1990 12:01 | 16 |
|
Jeff,
(BTW it's Mike) I don't think there's time to wait for figuring out
why these people do what they do. Sure we need to find out why, but in
the meantime we have to put the offenders away so there are no more
innocent victims. 2-3 years ago a man cut off a little boys penis and
the rescue workers couldn't find it to have it reattached. The thing
about this instance, is that the bastard who did it was out on parole.
He's been a habitual offender.
Yes, we need to find out why if we can, but I feel that something needs
to be done in the meantime. Not saying my solution is the best answer,
but it's the best one I can think of at this time.
Mike
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259.35 | Knock on wood ;-) | LDYBUG::BOMBARDIER | Wherever you go, there you are | Fri Aug 17 1990 14:34 | 4 |
|
Regarding my earlier reply ... I'm not really superstitious but ...
'Knock on wood' ;-) ... Kathy
|
259.36 | Look further | DISCVR::GILMAN | | Mon Aug 20 1990 10:10 | 35 |
| re .34 Mike, I did not say sit back and wait while we figure things
out. I notice that the predominent attitude is punish the offender,
period. The problem I have is that it seems to END there. If you will
read my earlier note titled "Hang em high" you will see my suggestions
that we need a balance.
Somehow we are forgetting the dear child we just saved from abuse may
someday turn into an abuser himself. At that point the SAME person
gets tossed into jail and subjected to the horrors that prison offers.
Eventually most get paroled and released into society. Having been
turned into even greater MONSTERS by the other prisoners the person
performs even greater horrors on more innocent people. My point is
not with the right or wrongness of this behavior. OF COURSE its wrong.
Wrong is wrong. What causes these originally dear little children
(most were when they were young) into these HORRORS we read about in
the paper? I went into that a bit in my earlier note. If you mistreat
someone long enough eventually many will mistreat others. Whether
society is right in locking them up or not is not the point in the
contest of which I am speaking.
I think we have reached a sad point because we have to lock many of our
fellows up to keep them from hurting others more, and BASICALLY WE
DON'T KNOW HOW ELSE TO CONTROL THEM except maybe to execute them.
We have reached the default point I think. If you can't fix it then
throw it away... and we are talking about throwing people away. Do
I have 'the' answer, of course I don't. But I do think that when
the U.S. produces so many people who hurt children that we had better
look at our basic values and what we are teaching our kids, because
some of those kids are becoming the abusers. The adult abusers didn't
just pop out of the ground as adults who hurt kids. They were kids too,
what happened to them to make them that way? I did NOT say don't hold
them responsible, I DID say lets spend a bit more effort working at the
conditions which make an environment conducive to people developing
this way instead of just locking them up, thowing away the key, and
then wondering why MORE come out of the woodwork. Jeff
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259.37 | | MAMTS3::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Mon Aug 20 1990 13:10 | 5 |
| RE:Jeff-agreed, there's got to be a way to find the key. I'd venture a
guess at what a solution would be, but I might be accused of being an
extremist (it has to do with religion)
Mike
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259.38 | Still more on this nasty subject. | DISCVR::GILMAN | | Mon Aug 20 1990 15:34 | 65 |
| Mike, as in most complex issues there is no ONE answer. The answers
lie in a variety of steps. Among them are:
1. Hold the abuser responsible.
2. Educate parents and kids.
3. Reduce the worship of violence our society seems to thrive on.
4. Teach (boys especially) that being a man does not involve being a
Rambo, but being a compassionate, caring person who stands up for human
rights does count.
5. Research the conditions likely to create an abuser, and attempt to
reduce/eliminate those conditions.
6. Offer STRICT but fair programs to rehabilitate abuses who were in-
volved in child abuse.
7. For repeat offenders who pretended to be rehabilitated but weren't
make life imprisonment mandatory.
It is interesting/reassuring to note that most abductions seem not to
be stranger abductions. This means that a person who is not a stranger
would be easier to track and find.
I do find the random violent cases particularly alarming because they
suggest a lack of normal thinking in that they seem to be done out of
pure hate. The example you cited with the little boy who had his penis
cut off is a prime example. Only a person who hated with more
intensity than I can imagine could do something like that.
I do think there is a difference between a case where a child is killed
and molested vs. an acquaintance who molests one child once. I suspect
the motivation is quite different. In the papers I see both types of cases
lumped together in the reporting methods. In this example we are
comparing abuse with murder and, I think that the two CAN be quite
different. How many kids are molested and killed vs. molested? I
think one will find that relative to the total number of cases few are
killed.
Whats my point? That the entire issue is extremely complex. If we hope
to understand and head off cases like these we should try and pay more
attention to the details of motivation because there are differences
and the answers lie within understanding those differences and treating
them appropriately. When we lump the person who mutilates and kills
kids in with the incest case we are overgeneralizing. As a result
our understanding of the motivation decreases. As our understanding
goes down, our passions go up and that helps nobody.
There is a saying: That the way to judge a Society is to examine the way
the lowest classes/criminals are treated. If these people are treated
fairly then it speaks well for the Society.
I think that among the steps necessary to help get the U.S. on the
path to reducing violence is for Society itself to set standards that
reduce violence.... such as getting the violence off TV and out of the
movies. We send a dual message.
As an aside: Look at the jails/prisons. They are full to the bursting
point, right? Is crime/violence going down? No, not as far as I can
tell. If anything, the ex-cons seem to wear their records as a badge of
achievement!
Things are fundamentally wrong. Many of the answers lie in ourselves...
not JUST the criminals.
Mankind seems to have the attitude that revenge is paramount. Until we
stop thinking that way we are doomed to keep the vicious circle going.
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259.39 | Well, If i may say | VFOVAX::DUNCAN | | Mon Aug 20 1990 16:00 | 38 |
|
Well, I will venture to offer a reason and probably get eaten alive.
Here goes.. I think that the whole "wanting to abuse" syndrome stems
from the abuser seeing themselves as abused. That is if he is not
genuinely crazy.. He sees the U.S.A as a place where there is great
wealth and somehow he is not getting any of it, and has no hop of
ever getting any.
I think that this country is one of the few places where you can
find 2 extremes living within walking distance somtimes. The very,
very RICH and the very very POOR. Put that in a society where money
and material things are of great importance, and people will feel
abused. In a society where you are encouraged to SPEND (with credit
cards) even though you have no cash, and then when it is time to pay
if you cannot pay, then your credit is messed up, you cannot even
rent an apartment..Well, people will feel abused.
If you are denied an ability to earn a living, by not getting a good
job because of religion, sex, race etc., then you will feel abused.
Maybe we should try to fix those things first, then if people do not
feel abused, they will not want to abuse.
But, I think that just in case, as a deterrent, we SHOULD have stricter
penalties. I was at home and watching CNN. A reporter told the
Iraqi ambassoador that she had heard of rapings by Iraqi soldiers.
He said," How many"
SHe: " about 3"
HE: "If they are caught, they are shot DEAD without a trial. IF a
person is caught raping someone here, there is a 50% chance that he
goes free, and if he doesn't he is put in jail with a TV and everything
and ina couple of years he goes free. What is your point?"
DEAD SILENCE..
Next question.
Nuff said.
Desryn
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259.40 | Still more on this. | DISCVR::GILMAN | | Mon Aug 20 1990 17:10 | 69 |
|
When I was a boy I was verbally/emotionally abused for years. It made
my life hell and it has taken me years to recover. My father was a
sick man. As much as I hated the abuse I never wanted him in jail.
He needed emotional help.
I have never felt the urge to pass my maltreatment along to others.
Apparently others do feel that urge.
But there are many types and causes of abuse and I see
oversimplifications and overgeneralizations again and again without
the person having any interest in anything other than vengence.
Desryn, there is one thing which seems to be assumed, and I question
its validity in some cases: The assumption is that the abuser is a
calculating person whos' prime aim is to beat the system, or if they
are caught to get a slap on the wrist to abuse again. I suspect that
many of the abusers are sick people who don't really think about the
consequences because they are so caught up in the progression of
thoughts that lead to the abuse. If this assumption is correct then the
punishment/imprisonment 'cure' fixes the problem by taking them off the
streets, fine. But the deterrence logic doesn't hold in THAT
example. Its similiar to the frame of mind a person attacking another
in a rage might be in. The deterence would figure in where the person
had time to calculate the events out and their possible consequences.
I am sure SOME are people who are cold calculating individuals who are
trying to get away with satisfying their urges. Others I suspect are
caught up in an emotional illness which is compulsive in nature. If my
assumption is correct, that some are compulsively caught up, deterrence
is a moot point.
I have a mother-in-law who WILL NOT go out of her house. Logic is a
wasted effort. She CANNOT emotionally go out. She would freak out
if forced out. If it was illegal to stay in, all the laws in World
or threats would not get her out. THAT is the type of situation some
are caught up in.... in as far as ability to control their lives is
concerned. Mental institution,? Yes, in some cases.
My main point in my series of notes in this string is to point out
that in my opinion that child abusers are driven by a variety of
emotions/compulsions/and urges. If we hope to sort out how to reduce
and stop the various types of child abuse BEFORE they happen we must
increase our understanding of the different reasons people do it, AND
treat those people appropriately. This is in contrast to simply
hanging all child abusers after they do it. If we take that approach
we will continue closing the gate after the horse is out indefinately,
and personally endorsing violence. We cannot afford the luxury of
passing along violence and revenge as ends in themselves any longer.
Look at the condition our Society is in.
Personally, I will get far more satisfaction out of preventing child
abuse rather than seeing another beaten/raped child with somebody
hanging in the background.
Your point about wealth and all is well taken and I am sure figures in
how some abuse cases develop, but I think the fundamental problem lies
in the values our society places on violence, revenge and the way ALL
people are treated. (I did not say the abuser is not responsible).
The point some people raise about some people having been abused
themselves going on to abuse still others points out part of what I am
trying to say.
I see overgeneralizations on this subject which if applied in a less
emotional context would have people jumping all over them for stating
opinions as facts etc. THATS WHAT I AM TRYING TO SAY IN THIS STRING.
|
259.41 | society as neglectful parent | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Aug 21 1990 09:28 | 61 |
| It seems to me that a society that enforces extremely strict
penalties with no support or prevention at all is a little like
parents who throw their child out of the house because they can't
cope with the child's behavior after having not bothered to teach
the child discipline, self-respect, self-management, and love.
While I was still in the hospital with my last baby, I got up in
the middle of the night and walked down to the nursery to watch
him sleeping there with all the other sweet cuddly little babies.
They were so new, so fresh, so peaceful.
And then I thought that some of those babies were going to go home
to parents who didn't care about them, or didn't want them. Some
of them were going to be beaten and mistreated by parents or
relatives, and some of them were going to be humiliated in school
and branded as stupid because they'd never had a good meal in
their lives. Quite possibly some of them would never get a good
education because their families didn't value book-learning. Some
of them were going to wind up dealing drugs because the only
people they saw with money in the land of opportunity are the
dealers, and some of them were going to wind up using drugs to try
to dull the pain of figuring out "What did I do wrong to make my
parents hate me so they abuse me like this?"
But you couldn't tell that by looking at them. There isn't a test
you could have given those babies that would say which ones would
go on to live happy and productive lives and which ones would wind
up being written off as societal trash.
But if you looked outside, you could make a better guess. The
ones who have loving families who care enough to give attention
and teach the child how to make his or her own decisions and be
responsible for the consequences -- no matter what their religion,
economic situation, or political beliefs, no matter whether that
discipline is "permissive" or "strict", no matter whether that
family structure is traditional or unconventional -- will mostly
grow up to be healthy well-adjusted adults. The ones who go home
to abuse, belittlement, neglect, and mockery -- no matter how
religious or rich the family -- will for the most part grow up to
be angry, bitter, resentful, crippled adults who may take their
inner pain out in drinking, abusing others, getting what they can
any way they can, and destroying those who appear to have what
they don't. They'll tend to think people are only for using, and
there won't be much moral difference in whether they express that
behavior in the streets or in the board rooms of major companies
where they negotiate leveraged buyouts whose only purpose is to
make them richer.
Maybe some criminals are born. But most of them are made. Most
of them are taught to be what they are by the people who should
have loved them. And when they don't turn out acceptable, we toss
them on the trash for having learned their lessons too well.
I'm not sure how one goes about healing a significant portion of
the population. I don't have answers. But a bit more compassion
and a bit less revenge is definitely in order, because until we do
something about not teaching people to hate, we're going to
continue to breed more and more criminals who have to be locked up
or executed for what they've done.
--bonnie
|
259.42 | | NEURON::REEVES | | Tue Aug 21 1990 13:30 | 3 |
| re:.41
Bonnie,
Thanks, IMO you hit the nail straight on the head!!
|
259.43 | Another abduction | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Tue Aug 28 1990 10:58 | 6 |
| Article in today's Dallas Morning News about a 4-yr-old girl found dead in
the swimming pool at her apartments. Her friends playing with her said a
few men got out of a car and lured her into it, then they saw her screaming
and banging on the windows of the car as it drove away. They killed her
(did not say whether anything was done before that) and dumped her into the
swimming pool, where she was found by her mother.
|
259.44 | Rape, Child Sexual Abuse == Often Kept Secret | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Wed Sep 05 1990 15:31 | 15 |
| A reminder to those of you who wondered if you are sheltered because you
do not know of anyone who was raped, murdered, etc.
Rape is much like child sexual abuse in that many people blame the victim.
Therefore, it is rare that a woman or a man will share that s/he has been
raped or molested.
Have you been sheltered? Yes, but probably not because of where you live,
but rather the victims/survivors have "sheltered" you by not sharing their own
pain with you.
The latest stats that I have heard are that 1 of 3 girls and 1 of 7 boys
will have been raped and/or molested by the age of (15/18?).
Carol
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259.45 | Not credible | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Sep 07 1990 11:20 | 12 |
| .43> Article in today's Dallas Morning News about a 4-yr-old girl found dead in
.43> the swimming pool at her apartments. Her friends playing with her said a
.43> few men got out of a car and lured her into it, then they saw her screaming
.43> and banging on the windows of the car as it drove away. They killed her
.43> (did not say whether anything was done before that) and dumped her into the
.43> swimming pool, where she was found by her mother.
I'm sorry, Kristen, but I don't believe this. These "few men" would
not drive off to a remote location, kill the girl, then drive back to
the apartment house to dump her in the pool. It's a hoax. The girl
must have died in a swimming pool accident, and perhaps the other kids
got hysterical and made this up to cover their sense of guilt.
|
259.46 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Sep 07 1990 11:43 | 14 |
| In re: <<< Note 259.44 by CSC32::DUBOIS "The early bird gets worms" >>>
-< Rape, Child Sexual Abuse == Often Kept Secret >-
I have seen similar reports, Carol, but you may give a mistaken
impression to people. The "latest stats" are not necessarily accurate,
and are, by definition (since we're talking about an under-reported
problem) guesses. I have seen detailed and credible studies with
alarming findings, but they CONFIRMED that sexual abuse of children by
strangers is virtually non-existent. The vast majority of the "abuse"
identified was unwanted sexual attention to teenagers and above from
people they knew. Date rape may be a serious problem, but it is not
the same as childhood sexual abuse.
- Bruce
|
259.47 | | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Fri Sep 14 1990 17:03 | 17 |
| < <<< Note 259.46 by RDVAX::COLLIER "Bruce Collier" >>>
< I have seen detailed and credible studies with
< alarming findings, but they CONFIRMED that sexual abuse of children by
< strangers is virtually non-existent.
I agree.
< The vast majority of the "abuse"
< identified was unwanted sexual attention to teenagers and above from
< people they knew.
I don't agree on the age. Although there is still much child abuse (I'm not
talking about date rape either) of children in their teens, there is a
LOT of abuse of babies, toddlers, young children, and preteens.
Carol
|