Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're crazy. What if the child was screaming because someone was abusing him, or someone was hurting his parent, or an intruder was entering the home?Anonymous wrote:Whoever called is an ahole. Sorry you had to experience that. Have they apologized to you?
I didn't call the police, but one time, I called my neighbor because I heard her older teenage daughter screaming at the top of her lungs. Very loudly. I feared she was there alone with her boyfriend, and a DV situation was occurring. So I called my neighbor, and it turns out my neighbor was home, and they were arguing. Her daughter was screaming at her. I was embarrassed, but I wouldn't have forgiven myself if something terrible was happening, and I just listened and did nothing.
What if the police harmed the family because of your call? Would you forgive yourself then?
I think your choice was reasonable, but there’s no “get out of regret free” card for life. Every decision can go wrong.
THIS. So much of this. Most police now are quite dangerous and trigger happy. It's from hiring ex military and bottom of the barrel.
Too many police with a respect-my-authority complex that like to place socialist stazi gestapo with their immunity.
People who really need help aren’t going to get it if you spread this attitude.
The many instances of police brutality are actually what are spreading “this attitude “. That’s something that many of us have to deal with and weigh — all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're crazy. What if the child was screaming because someone was abusing him, or someone was hurting his parent, or an intruder was entering the home?Anonymous wrote:Whoever called is an ahole. Sorry you had to experience that. Have they apologized to you?
I didn't call the police, but one time, I called my neighbor because I heard her older teenage daughter screaming at the top of her lungs. Very loudly. I feared she was there alone with her boyfriend, and a DV situation was occurring. So I called my neighbor, and it turns out my neighbor was home, and they were arguing. Her daughter was screaming at her. I was embarrassed, but I wouldn't have forgiven myself if something terrible was happening, and I just listened and did nothing.
What if the police harmed the family because of your call? Would you forgive yourself then?
I think your choice was reasonable, but there’s no “get out of regret free” card for life. Every decision can go wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had this happen - my kid was crying at the bus stop for having to go to school. She’s a little bit of a drama queen and admits it. I’m also a minority mom, so I do wonder what “the neighbors” think.
So a passing mom (who happens to be a teacher at her school) called the police. I found out who called (days later) because my kid told me and so did the passing mom. I did thank her for calling and my kid for confirming what happened. The police did come visit and performed a welfare check. I was surprised but I was glad that someone cared about my kid. The police also verified my kid was at school and was doing ok. It’s not a big deal unless you’re hiding something and the bar for that is pretty high (not just being gay or using pot, but like having a sex offender boyfriend.) The kid does need to be where you think they are. If they’re not, the cops will look at mom and dad. A minority might have a harder time because cops might not understand different cultures or people with disabilities (who are all different.)
Putting cameras in seems a little extreme. Know your rights, behave like a lady. If the cop mouths off you can report them. I’ve done that before. You seem overly anxious for what sounds like a shitty morning, but one where the process worked as it should.
LOL at the busybody teacher trying to paint herself as some angel.
Anonymous wrote:Teach your kid not to scream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're crazy. What if the child was screaming because someone was abusing him, or someone was hurting his parent, or an intruder was entering the home?Anonymous wrote:Whoever called is an ahole. Sorry you had to experience that. Have they apologized to you?
I didn't call the police, but one time, I called my neighbor because I heard her older teenage daughter screaming at the top of her lungs. Very loudly. I feared she was there alone with her boyfriend, and a DV situation was occurring. So I called my neighbor, and it turns out my neighbor was home, and they were arguing. Her daughter was screaming at her. I was embarrassed, but I wouldn't have forgiven myself if something terrible was happening, and I just listened and did nothing.
What if the police harmed the family because of your call? Would you forgive yourself then?
I think your choice was reasonable, but there’s no “get out of regret free” card for life. Every decision can go wrong.
THIS. So much of this. Most police now are quite dangerous and trigger happy. It's from hiring ex military and bottom of the barrel.
Too many police with a respect-my-authority complex that like to place socialist stazi gestapo with their immunity.
People who really need help aren’t going to get it if you spread this attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're crazy. What if the child was screaming because someone was abusing him, or someone was hurting his parent, or an intruder was entering the home?Anonymous wrote:Whoever called is an ahole. Sorry you had to experience that. Have they apologized to you?
I didn't call the police, but one time, I called my neighbor because I heard her older teenage daughter screaming at the top of her lungs. Very loudly. I feared she was there alone with her boyfriend, and a DV situation was occurring. So I called my neighbor, and it turns out my neighbor was home, and they were arguing. Her daughter was screaming at her. I was embarrassed, but I wouldn't have forgiven myself if something terrible was happening, and I just listened and did nothing.
What if the police harmed the family because of your call? Would you forgive yourself then?
I think your choice was reasonable, but there’s no “get out of regret free” card for life. Every decision can go wrong.
THIS. So much of this. Most police now are quite dangerous and trigger happy. It's from hiring ex military and bottom of the barrel.
Too many police with a respect-my-authority complex that like to place socialist stazi gestapo with their immunity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you all for the reassurance. The whole thing made a difficult morning with my child much worse. The neighbor has not acknowledged my note yet. It just occurred to me that since their dad drops the kids off on certain mornings at my house before school (and today was one of those mornings), and the meltdown happened immediately after he dropped them off, he could have called the police. But our coparenting has been going very smoothly for several years now. So I doubt he would do that.
I'm sorry what? You did not share the fact that this neighbor's children were in your house at the time. What the hell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're crazy. What if the child was screaming because someone was abusing him, or someone was hurting his parent, or an intruder was entering the home?Anonymous wrote:Whoever called is an ahole. Sorry you had to experience that. Have they apologized to you?
I didn't call the police, but one time, I called my neighbor because I heard her older teenage daughter screaming at the top of her lungs. Very loudly. I feared she was there alone with her boyfriend, and a DV situation was occurring. So I called my neighbor, and it turns out my neighbor was home, and they were arguing. Her daughter was screaming at her. I was embarrassed, but I wouldn't have forgiven myself if something terrible was happening, and I just listened and did nothing.
What if the police harmed the family because of your call? Would you forgive yourself then?
I think your choice was reasonable, but there’s no “get out of regret free” card for life. Every decision can go wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all for the reassurance. The whole thing made a difficult morning with my child much worse. The neighbor has not acknowledged my note yet. It just occurred to me that since their dad drops the kids off on certain mornings at my house before school (and today was one of those mornings), and the meltdown happened immediately after he dropped them off, he could have called the police. But our coparenting has been going very smoothly for several years now. So I doubt he would do that.