Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a child who fell through the cracks. This is a child whose family betrayed her and sold her. No amount of social services could have saved her. I hope her mother gets the punishment she deserves. That poor sweet girl.
This is so easy for people who have never walked a second in her mother's shoes to say. People who are homeless have an entirely different life experience than those of us who have never been dependent on others whom we do not know for support. I don't know if her mom sold her or if she trusted the wrong people in a situation where your life dictates that you trust strangers - keeping n mind that this wrong person was employed by the shelter so presumably was trustworthy. But at this point I sure don't know enough to judge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a child who fell through the cracks. This is a child whose family betrayed her and sold her. No amount of social services could have saved her. I hope her mother gets the punishment she deserves. That poor sweet girl.
This is so easy for people who have never walked a second in her mother's shoes to say. People who are homeless have an entirely different life experience than those of us who have never been dependent on others whom we do not know for support. I don't know if her mom sold her or if she trusted the wrong people in a situation where your life dictates that you trust strangers - keeping n mind that this wrong person was employed by the shelter so presumably was trustworthy. But at this point I sure don't know enough to judge.
Only she and her boyfriend had FB postings flashing money and new Jordans around the time Relish was given to Tatem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a child who fell through the cracks. This is a child whose family betrayed her and sold her. No amount of social services could have saved her. I hope her mother gets the punishment she deserves. That poor sweet girl.
This is so easy for people who have never walked a second in her mother's shoes to say. People who are homeless have an entirely different life experience than those of us who have never been dependent on others whom we do not know for support. I don't know if her mom sold her or if she trusted the wrong people in a situation where your life dictates that you trust strangers - keeping n mind that this wrong person was employed by the shelter so presumably was trustworthy. But at this point I sure don't know enough to judge.
Only she and her boyfriend had FB postings flashing money and new Jordans around the time Relish was given to Tatem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not a child who fell through the cracks. This is a child whose family betrayed her and sold her. No amount of social services could have saved her. I hope her mother gets the punishment she deserves. That poor sweet girl.
This is so easy for people who have never walked a second in her mother's shoes to say. People who are homeless have an entirely different life experience than those of us who have never been dependent on others whom we do not know for support. I don't know if her mom sold her or if she trusted the wrong people in a situation where your life dictates that you trust strangers - keeping n mind that this wrong person was employed by the shelter so presumably was trustworthy. But at this point I sure don't know enough to judge.
Anonymous wrote:As a social worker, I was really worried to open up this thread. Most of the time, when social workers are in the news, it's about the clients that have slipped through the cracks. Sometimes it's negligence on the part of the SW but most of the time it's bureaucracy, insane case loads, red tape, or a little bit of everything. I did a stint in a DC school in SE. That is one place I would never, ever want to go back. There is no support from anyone you'd expect: parents think your sole job is to get their kids taken away (so not true... reunification is almost always the goal) and principals/teachers think you're a whiny feelings-only person who isn't based in reality. I feel so badly for social workers who lose a client. I had a teen girl in a group of mine almost 6 months ago for a few weeks, and about 3 months ago I found out through a coworker she killed herself. I don't go more than a day or two without thinking about her and thinking if there was something I could have seen or done. I can't imagine how helpless the SW must feel in this case.
Anonymous wrote:This is not a child who fell through the cracks. This is a child whose family betrayed her and sold her. No amount of social services could have saved her. I hope her mother gets the punishment she deserves. That poor sweet girl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read the Post article. Thanks for the link. I am filled with rage. How on Earth could a mother do this to her child? How can we as a society let this happen? Why can we put a man on the moon and build a space station but yet we cannot address mental illness and poverty?
Parents sell their kids every day, right here in the US. Sex trafficking is huge.