Anonymous wrote:
I don't agree with the OP, we need to dig deeper into a lot of these youth to see how we can support them as a society. The recurring same policies and tactics are no longer working and therefore we cannot keep asking why longer-harsher prison sentences are not working. We need to work on a new revolutionary idea in criminal enforcement. Broken children become broken adults when coupled with generational trauma.
There is enough money in DC, but not enough social workers.
No, that’s not it. Harsh sentences absolutely do work, they just have to be consistently enforced. Have you been in Singapore?
Of course, it should be a multi-pronged approach. Consistent enforcement is just one aspect, and that must include the adults around these kids.
I heard a social worker on the radio this morning lamenting that he’s visited the kids’ homes who are repeatedly stealing cars and engaging in criminal activities.
His complaint: There were drugs in the home, and no food in the fridge.
To this I would say that these youths then should be removed from these environments that are not homes.
More social workers are not going to make a difference in these situations. These kids are already eligible for free food, free healthcare, and free education.
Support systems that kids in other countries could only dream of! Yet it does not help at all, it has no positive impact. Why is that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The G wagon belongs to a witness, the victim was in the sedan. Victim is alive but may be paralyzed. That could be any of us or one of our kids, just driving along in broad daylight. This is insane. Very slow traffic there, so a "road diet" is not the answer before that narrative gets thrown in.
My 14 year old often gets off metro around that time at dupont, and this is right near my office. I left at 3:30 today and was parked a couple blocks away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't agree with the OP, we need to dig deeper into a lot of these youth to see how we can support them as a society. The recurring same policies and tactics are no longer working and therefore we cannot keep asking why longer-harsher prison sentences are not working. We need to work on a new revolutionary idea in criminal enforcement. Broken children become broken adults when coupled with generational trauma.
There is enough money in DC, but not enough social workers.
No, that’s not it. Harsh sentences absolutely do work, they just have to be consistently enforced. Have you been in Singapore?
Of course, it should be a multi-pronged approach. Consistent enforcement is just one aspect, and that must include the adults around these kids.
I heard a social worker on the radio this morning lamenting that he’s visited the kids’ homes who are repeatedly stealing cars and engaging in criminal activities.
His complaint: There were drugs in the home, and no food in the fridge.
Children are stealing because they are hungry and in need, in order to be removed we need more social workers and we need to pay social workers well. This is truly tragic. I cannot imagine what is like for a starving child to need to commit crime in order to survive. Yes, we need wrap around services, it seems like the parents of these children are on drugs. Hence, why we have kids out in the streets targeting people. Drugged out parents are trying to escape some problem. This is really sad.
Anonymous wrote:The G wagon belongs to a witness, the victim was in the sedan. Victim is alive but may be paralyzed. That could be any of us or one of our kids, just driving along in broad daylight. This is insane. Very slow traffic there, so a "road diet" is not the answer before that narrative gets thrown in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.
What. The. F*ck.
Is the shooter and the victim known to each other?
This is terrible for the victim.
I personally think we need to raise the minimum wage, wrap-around services, mental health assistance, and better food/housing accommodations all of which effect the brain. If you don't have access to high-quality food, wages and housing, your brain is likely to take a chance on crime. How many WashPo articles have we read on poor housing in SE DC and lead-based housing, rodent infestations and food deserts in that part of town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.
What. The. F*ck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.
What. The. F*ck.
Anonymous wrote:I don't agree with the OP, we need to dig deeper into a lot of these youth to see how we can support them as a society. The recurring same policies and tactics are no longer working and therefore we cannot keep asking why longer-harsher prison sentences are not working. We need to work on a new revolutionary idea in criminal enforcement. Broken children become broken adults when coupled with generational trauma.
There is enough money in DC, but not enough social workers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.
This rarely happens in Fairfax, VA.
Yeah. Mkay. I’d rather live in Shaw. I mean there are limits to just how bad thing have to get before you consider.. Fairfax?! Been once. Made me go for some biometric visa crap. In 50 years
Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.
This rarely happens in Fairfax, VA.
Anonymous wrote:Dupont victim above may be paralyzed.
Any of us could be driving down the street. Waiting to pick up a child or spouse from work. Shot in broad daylight in "safe" areas of town.
This is no way to live.