Let's start with this case, which hit the news yesterday and has some updates today... http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/05/1...alifornia-parents-arrested-cops-announce.html http://www.foxnews.com/us/2018/05/1...t-with-crossbows-and-bbs-prosecutors-say.html So, we'll wait for the trial, the evidence, for the mob-rule to die down, but assuming the accusations are true, what do you do with people who are torturing their children? Those 10 kids, even though they lived through this, are messed up for life presumably.
Man, if you guys had any idea how common those living conditions are in low income housing areas, I've been in my fair share, the only difference 99% of the time, they had less kids, in some cases, not much less.
Guys, I agree crappy conditions are probably pretty common, but the 2nd article talks about shooting pellet rifles and cross-bows at the kids, plus burns and other intentional torture type activities. Surely that isn't common?
I was speaking primarily on the 'living conditions', the filth much of the kids get used to growing up in, etc..., not the torture techniques.
https://www.theblaze.com/news/2018/...orkers-fired-resulting-apology-is-astonishing While Blomgren noted that the employees who denied service to the woman “are not themselves racist,” he said “in this situation it doesn’t really matter” because Lillian felt “like she had been discriminated against. Sometimes impact outweighs intent and when that happens people do need to be held accountable. Since both Lillian and the clamoring public were demanding that these staff members be fired that it is what we did putting these two young women out of work. It was an incredibly difficult thing for us to do especially when they felt that they were just upholding our closing time of 9pm but the way in which they went about it lacked sensitivity and understanding of the racial implications at work.”