Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI your judgement is likely driven by fear and and unconscious need for reassurance.
Fear, yes! There is an epidemic of reckless teenage boys doing willfully dangerous things and it has to stop. This time no one else was injured but that is often not the case. Parents of boys need to DO BETTER. You can't just check out once they hit 6th grade like so many do.
My theory is that young children are so padded and overprotected by parents these days, desperately lacking adequate exposure to the physical world, that when they become teens and naturally separate from their parents, they’re abilities to assess risk and consequences are f*cked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always the boys. Good job, Boy Moms!
The boy was injured due to a female driver’s actions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid in my high school in the 1990s fell off the back of a pickup truck.
Is he ok?
I'm not that poster but someone I knew in school died riding in the back of a pickup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So the girl driving the car was a target and the boy jumped on the back of her jeep. I'm confused how he could even spray her that way at all. And why the thought would be to kick it in reverse if some presumably acquaintance jumped on your car.
It's ashame, that these few seconds of wrong impulsive decisions now have a lifetime of consequence for so many people.
I feel sad for everyone involved.
I’m guessing he didn’t think she’d actually drive anywhere if he was on the back of the car, so he thought he had her cornered, but then she did, to get away from him. I’m no lawyer — if she knew she was driving with him on the back and then he fell off and she kept driving, does that count as leaving the scene of an accident?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A kid in my high school in the 1990s fell off the back of a pickup truck.
Is he ok?
Anonymous wrote:The boy’s parents are upset because he hopped on the back of his target’s car while it was parked in a driveway, but the girl who was his target reversed out of the driveway and drove for 5 minutes with him clinging to the car. They said she was driving so fast, he couldn’t just jump off. When she hit a bump, he flew off. EMTs responded to the 911 call about an unconscious person. The police weren’t even aware that he’d fallen off a car until his parents contacted them. They’re investigating now. The parents feel that this wasn’t merely an accident.
https://nypost.com/2025/05/08/us-news/texas-teen-isaac-leal-on-life-support-after-playing-senior-assassin-just-weeks-before-graduation/
Anonymous wrote:A kid in my high school in the 1990s fell off the back of a pickup truck.
Anonymous wrote:Your comments are in really bad taste, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, this has been happening for the last several millennia.
Boys are idiots. We lost three while I was in HS-- one hunting accident, one motorcycle accident, and one "hey guys watch me jump into this quarry from 40 feet up"
Lazy parenting answer. DO BETTER.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so glad our school system has made senior assassin illegal and warned that anyone playing or caught playing cannot walk at graduation.
I saw a video last night of an upset mom who had a HS kid show up at the funeral of their family member twice trying to "kill" her kid. AT A FUNERAL!
Anonymous wrote:It's always the boys. Good job, Boy Moms!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI your judgement is likely driven by fear and and unconscious need for reassurance.
Fear, yes! There is an epidemic of reckless teenage boys doing willfully dangerous things and it has to stop. This time no one else was injured but that is often not the case. Parents of boys need to DO BETTER. You can't just check out once they hit 6th grade like so many do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always the boys. Good job, Boy Moms!
Never get these posts. Many many people have boys AND girls.
Anonymous wrote:It's always the boys. Good job, Boy Moms!