Man with no kids at playground

Anonymous
It’s my playground I can cry if I want
To
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My mom taught elementary school, and they had a guy who would come and do his “exercises” at the playground during recess. Turns out he was a sex offender. Just call the police if something feels off. They are trained to handle someone who might just be autistic, and can easily distinguish from a creeper. They also had issues with some of the local developmentally disabled guys coming to the playground at my mom’s school, and they ended up working with the group home to explain to them that they couldn’t be there during school hours.


A school playground during school hours is entirely different from a public playground. Presumably a mother with toddlers would have been asked to leave too because the playground is reserved for students and staff at that school.


So basically the police shouldn't check for suspicious adults who might be sex offenders so long as they limit their activities to after-school hours?
Anonymous
Why aren’t you sharing what playground this is
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My mom taught elementary school, and they had a guy who would come and do his “exercises” at the playground during recess. Turns out he was a sex offender. Just call the police if something feels off. They are trained to handle someone who might just be autistic, and can easily distinguish from a creeper. They also had issues with some of the local developmentally disabled guys coming to the playground at my mom’s school, and they ended up working with the group home to explain to them that they couldn’t be there during school hours.


A school playground during school hours is entirely different from a public playground. Presumably a mother with toddlers would have been asked to leave too because the playground is reserved for students and staff at that school.


So basically the police shouldn't check for suspicious adults who might be sex offenders so long as they limit their activities to after-school hours?


What defines suspicious activity for adults?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My mom taught elementary school, and they had a guy who would come and do his “exercises” at the playground during recess. Turns out he was a sex offender. Just call the police if something feels off. They are trained to handle someone who might just be autistic, and can easily distinguish from a creeper. They also had issues with some of the local developmentally disabled guys coming to the playground at my mom’s school, and they ended up working with the group home to explain to them that they couldn’t be there during school hours.


A school playground during school hours is entirely different from a public playground. Presumably a mother with toddlers would have been asked to leave too because the playground is reserved for students and staff at that school.


So basically the police shouldn't check for suspicious adults who might be sex offenders so long as they limit their activities to after-school hours?


What defines suspicious activity for adults?


Anything that white upper middle class Mom wouldn’t do. Everyone else is a threat.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My mom taught elementary school, and they had a guy who would come and do his “exercises” at the playground during recess. Turns out he was a sex offender. Just call the police if something feels off. They are trained to handle someone who might just be autistic, and can easily distinguish from a creeper. They also had issues with some of the local developmentally disabled guys coming to the playground at my mom’s school, and they ended up working with the group home to explain to them that they couldn’t be there during school hours.


A school playground during school hours is entirely different from a public playground. Presumably a mother with toddlers would have been asked to leave too because the playground is reserved for students and staff at that school.


So basically the police shouldn't check for suspicious adults who might be sex offenders so long as they limit their activities to after-school hours?


What defines suspicious activity for adults?


Anything that white upper middle class Mom wouldn’t do. Everyone else is a threat.


Middle class moms are not sex offenders.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My mom taught elementary school, and they had a guy who would come and do his “exercises” at the playground during recess. Turns out he was a sex offender. Just call the police if something feels off. They are trained to handle someone who might just be autistic, and can easily distinguish from a creeper. They also had issues with some of the local developmentally disabled guys coming to the playground at my mom’s school, and they ended up working with the group home to explain to them that they couldn’t be there during school hours.


A school playground during school hours is entirely different from a public playground. Presumably a mother with toddlers would have been asked to leave too because the playground is reserved for students and staff at that school.


So basically the police shouldn't check for suspicious adults who might be sex offenders so long as they limit their activities to after-school hours?


What defines suspicious activity for adults?


Anything that white upper middle class Mom wouldn’t do. Everyone else is a threat.


So the man does not have a big stick up his rear end like the white upper middle class Karen's.
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