Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do the free range children taste better?
Only if you keep their diets organic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car
That's wack. (And I am a fan of free range parenting).
Yes! This Schenazy free range woman should butt out of this one-totally a different situation than typical Free Range parenting. Letting your 8 year old play outside near your home, 9 year old walk to a nearby park, or 11 year old to the corner store for milk is vastly differnt from leaving 2 babies strapped in a freezing car for an hour while their parent's drink wine. Schenazy is nuts!
Free-range is used for older children. This bitch is crazy. Infants/toddlers can not inherently be free-range because they have not yet developed mental or physical capabilities to be safe.
Yea--my 22-month old that swallowed all of his siblings Legos was 'free-ranging' so I did not see it happen![]()
This. That article is insane. You can't leave babies and toddlers unattended.
Anonymous wrote:Do the free range children taste better?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car
That's wack. (And I am a fan of free range parenting).
Yes! This Schenazy free range woman should butt out of this one-totally a different situation than typical Free Range parenting. Letting your 8 year old play outside near your home, 9 year old walk to a nearby park, or 11 year old to the corner store for milk is vastly differnt from leaving 2 babies strapped in a freezing car for an hour while their parent's drink wine. Schenazy is nuts!
Free-range is used for older children. This bitch is crazy. Infants/toddlers can not inherently be free-range because they have not yet developed mental or physical capabilities to be safe.
Yea--my 22-month old that swallowed all of his siblings Legos was 'free-ranging' so I did not see it happen![]()
Anonymous wrote:
Do the free range children taste better?
Sounds like a modern day Brothers Grimm tale.
Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car
Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had my car window punched out in NW for an iPhone on the seat. No kids though.
These a-holes leave their kids plus their phone??
+1. Maybe because I come from a country with high crime rates, I would never in a million years excuse these parents' behavior. Apart from the cold factor, I cannot fathom how one could leave little kids (babies really) unattended and risk someone breaking into the car, harming them, stealing the car with the kids inside or kidnapping them. It's just unthinkable how not one, but two individuals came to the conclusion that this was somehow acceptable.
But they parked in front of the ritz to ensure nothing would happen to the car
Anonymous wrote:Do the free range children taste better?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had my car window punched out in NW for an iPhone on the seat. No kids though.
These a-holes leave their kids plus their phone??
+1. Maybe because I come from a country with high crime rates, I would never in a million years excuse these parents' behavior. Apart from the cold factor, I cannot fathom how one could leave little kids (babies really) unattended and risk someone breaking into the car, harming them, stealing the car with the kids inside or kidnapping them. It's just unthinkable how not one, but two individuals came to the conclusion that this was somehow acceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car
That's wack. (And I am a fan of free range parenting).
Yes! This Schenazy free range woman should butt out of this one-totally a different situation than typical Free Range parenting. Letting your 8 year old play outside near your home, 9 year old walk to a nearby park, or 11 year old to the corner store for milk is vastly differnt from leaving 2 babies strapped in a freezing car for an hour while their parent's drink wine. Schenazy is nuts!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car
That's wack. (And I am a fan of free range parenting).
Anonymous wrote:One of the most vocal "free range" parent advocates has written a piece decrying the fact that the parents didn't get their kids back immediately. She defends them on the basis of the IPhone (which was "giving the kids an open connection to" the parents!) and argues that the police should have tried "teaching them that this wasn't a good idea and telling them not to do it again" instead of arresting them." Because "seizing their children" is "acting as if they were deliberately cruel."
Unbelievable.
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/03/parents-who-left-kids-alone-in-cold-car