Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I saw arrest a 10yo - my first instinct was that the child is black and the counselor is white. That’s what happens to black boys and would never happen to a white boy.
And yep, confirmed.
How sad. Black boys (and girls) are treated like adults from a very young age.
Such an overreaction.
+1
He’s 10. Such a shame.
But aren’t we supposed to always believe the woman?
Anonymous wrote:When I saw arrest a 10yo - my first instinct was that the child is black and the counselor is white. That’s what happens to black boys and would never happen to a white boy.
And yep, confirmed.
How sad. Black boys (and girls) are treated like adults from a very young age.
Such an overreaction.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Fair point to the above. My oldest is 6 so I don’t really have first hand experience with what 10 year olds know/are capable of. I’m viewing this through the eyes of a mom with younger boys who absolutely still love body part/toilet humor and don’t yet understand bodies as having sexual parts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I saw arrest a 10yo - my first instinct was that the child is black and the counselor is white. That’s what happens to black boys and would never happen to a white boy.
And yep, confirmed.
How sad. Black boys (and girls) are treated like adults from a very young age.
Such an overreaction.
I had the same instinct, and yep, there it is. I really cannot understand why people who think it’s ok to ruin the lives of 10-year olds go into the education business. Not to say the child shouldn’t be disciplined if it turned out that was an intentional grope, but not everything is appropriate for the criminal justice system. Especially when it comes to black children, who are still children and still think like children and should still be treated like children, despite whatever prejudice or nonsense beliefs their educators bring with them.
Anonymous wrote:When I saw arrest a 10yo - my first instinct was that the child is black and the counselor is white. That’s what happens to black boys and would never happen to a white boy.
And yep, confirmed.
How sad. Black boys (and girls) are treated like adults from a very young age.
Such an overreaction.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly if an adult tells a child you just touched my breast and he did not do it knowingly, it can be expected a child would yell “I didn’t do that!”. Kids nearly always are vocal and don’t want to be punished for things that did not do. Shy children may tear up and cry at the thought of being accused.
Anonymous wrote:A 10 year old should be given counseling or detention or a suspension, but not be injected into the criminal justice system based on what has been reported.
When given a chance to state what happened, the 10 year old simply yelled at his teacher and did not deny the validity of the allegation so the more reasonable assumption is that the incident happened as reported. Nevertheless, still no need for police / court / criminal justice involvement.
Anonymous wrote:When I saw arrest a 10yo - my first instinct was that the child is black and the counselor is white. That’s what happens to black boys and would never happen to a white boy.
And yep, confirmed.
How sad. Black boys (and girls) are treated like adults from a very young age.
Such an overreaction.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/10-year-old-student-hugged-school-counselor-now-facing-charges-accused-rcna56355
This raises some interesting questions. Obviously, there could be more facts here like this is a repeated pattern of behavior that the school cannot speak to. So I’m trying to keep an open mind.
But … the kid is 10. It’s entirely possible he a) accidentally touched her breast during the hug or b) has absolutely no understanding of the gravity of doing so. I’m not saying the counselor should give up her right to bodily autonomy, but it seems like this is a risk of working around kids and perhaps getting the criminal justice system involved is overkill. The racial differences also aren’t good optics.
Let’s say the kid truly is pervy, I don’t think this behavior should be enabled, but maybe a stern lesson could be taught without cops involved?
What says DCUM about this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Fair point to the above. My oldest is 6 so I don’t really have first hand experience with what 10 year olds know/are capable of. I’m viewing this through the eyes of a mom with younger boys who absolutely still love body part/toilet humor and don’t yet understand bodies as having sexual parts.