Anonymous wrote:I skipped all the pages so forgive me but WHO IS PAYING FOR THIS ? I know it ain't free.
Kids today think they are stars and can live like one. On Mom and Dad's dime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous, she is 15 years old. Im sure she used that same tactic when she got her iphone
All the kids have iphones , MOM!
As a grown woman, I refuse to ride in a car with a random driver let alone my kid...
It does not matter if she is with a group of friends... this driver can use child locks in for the back doors , pull out his gun and throw those phones out the window.
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We have officially jumped the shark with this thread!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
I have older and younger ones. They know to call us and we will come. If they used good judgment, they will not get in trouble. I teach them to try not to get in those situations in the first place.
Your older kids have never been to a party and realized their was alcohol?
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous, she is 15 years old. Im sure she used that same tactic when she got her iphone
All the kids have iphones , MOM!
As a grown woman, I refuse to ride in a car with a random driver let alone my kid...
It does not matter if she is with a group of friends... this driver can use child locks in for the back doors , pull out his gun and throw those phones out the window.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
I have older and younger ones. They know to call us and we will come. If they used good judgment, they will not get in trouble. I teach them to try not to get in those situations in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think your young teens will be faced with many situatoin... drinking party, their date drank before a dance, they were going to get food after "activity" but it is pouring rain, they want to go to the movies with friends and parents are 30 minutes away but it's only a 15 minute uber ride (with 4 friend, $3/chidl)...
I do think it is good for kids to learn how to navigate getting around... bus, metro, driving, walking and uber.
It's just another form of transportation. Do you guys forbid your kids from taking metro and bus also?
One might say the same of hitchhiking. Not that hitchhiking is necessarily comparable to Uber, but I think the posters have made it quite clear that it's this specific form of transportation they have concerns about, not the concept of transportation in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
+1
Parenting issue - doesn't apply to everyone.
You really think it's necessary for young teens to practice getting out of dangerous drinking/drugging parties by calling the Uber guy?
I think your young teens will be faced with many situatoin... drinking party, their date drank before a dance, they were going to get food after "activity" but it is pouring rain, they want to go to the movies with friends and parents are 30 minutes away but it's only a 15 minute uber ride (with 4 friend, $3/chidl)...
I do think it is good for kids to learn how to navigate getting around... bus, metro, driving, walking and uber.
It's just another form of transportation. Do you guys forbid your kids from taking metro and bus also?
Anonymous wrote:
I think your young teens will be faced with many situatoin... drinking party, their date drank before a dance, they were going to get food after "activity" but it is pouring rain, they want to go to the movies with friends and parents are 30 minutes away but it's only a 15 minute uber ride (with 4 friend, $3/chidl)...
I do think it is good for kids to learn how to navigate getting around... bus, metro, driving, walking and uber.
It's just another form of transportation. Do you guys forbid your kids from taking metro and bus also?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
+1
Parenting issue - doesn't apply to everyone.
You really think it's necessary for young teens to practice getting out of dangerous drinking/drugging parties by calling the Uber guy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
+1
Parenting issue - doesn't apply to everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.
I agree it is a parenting issue. I trust my children to get out of a bad situation and to use their judgement. When a bad situation arises they knew what to do. They are older now ... if you don't have a HS graduate you are just entering the years of discourse.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me a helicopter, but if my 15 year old is at a drinking party I would want them to call me to come and get them. Not the Uber guy.
+1, I would want them to call even more if they were drinking.
But that's precisely why they wouldn't call you. Most teens feel the choice is uber home or drive with drunk friend. Nobody wants to call their parents when they've been drinking no matter how understanding their parents say they will be.
What do you base this statement on?
Parents who are hands off or know their parents will not come get them.
Our school has a meeting with kids about drinking and drugs and they took a survey that they won't call their parents because their parents will lecture them and freak out. They would rather stay at a drinking party and risk getting caught than call parents.
They also said they would be more likely to call an Uber than call their parents.
That is a parenting issue, not an uber issue. Either way if they Ubered you would see the bill and start to question it? As parents, you know when your child has been drinking and how you deal with it is up to you but they need to know you will come get them and support them.