Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A recent Wilson grad stabbed a complete stranger to death on a train this summer. No, I am not painting all Wilson or other student with that brush - merely highlighting how volatile a situation has potential to be. If you don't know a young person you also cannot predict how they will react. Police are trained in this. If someone is engaged in criminal.mischief and you cannot determine it safe to intervene, call them. Nothing wimpy about that. The kid will get a warning from someone they can't cuss out, strike or just roll their eyes at. Hopefully it will make an impression.
Clearly this graduate was on the jail (vs Yale) track.
Uh, no. From the press it appears the young man was mentally ill - and the mental illness struck a couple of years after he graduated (and went to college - not Yale, but a perfectly respectable school). This is (sadly, horribly) a pretty typical age for many mental illnesses, e.g., schizophrenia.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. To be honest my kid goes to deal and it wasn't me I was concerned about. My immediate thought was if I make a video or call the police and the boy recognizes me later - because my size is not unique - then do I put my very small DS at risk of retaliation. Merit or not that's the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A recent Wilson grad stabbed a complete stranger to death on a train this summer. No, I am not painting all Wilson or other student with that brush - merely highlighting how volatile a situation has potential to be. If you don't know a young person you also cannot predict how they will react. Police are trained in this. If someone is engaged in criminal.mischief and you cannot determine it safe to intervene, call them. Nothing wimpy about that. The kid will get a warning from someone they can't cuss out, strike or just roll their eyes at. Hopefully it will make an impression.
Clearly this graduate was on the jail (vs Yale) track.
Anonymous wrote:A recent Wilson grad stabbed a complete stranger to death on a train this summer. No, I am not painting all Wilson or other student with that brush - merely highlighting how volatile a situation has potential to be. If you don't know a young person you also cannot predict how they will react. Police are trained in this. If someone is engaged in criminal.mischief and you cannot determine it safe to intervene, call them. Nothing wimpy about that. The kid will get a warning from someone they can't cuss out, strike or just roll their eyes at. Hopefully it will make an impression.
Anonymous wrote:Good. I am not sure what is w the anti police attitude. Their presence dampens mayhem, their judicious intervention may get a kid back on track. When jn doubt, summon them. And the schools/parents need to get the message that the kids need to behave as they exit campus or police will respond
I feel really bad for the metro bus routes constantly under attack by rock throwers. They need to nip that, asap. That is hell for the drivers and passengers.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe they are the parents of the kids who throw rocks. This type of attitude and disrespect for others usually starts at home.