Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of your kids gone to an unofficial/social media publicized anti-prom? This is the night before prom at a pricy venue-invites are on social media and “everyone” knows the kid whose family is throwing it. My questions are-is this a thing? And, if so, wtf?
If you know where it is and when it is, call the non-emergency police number and let them know that you are aware of this large under-age event going on and that there will likely be under-aged drinking, etc going on. The up-front police presence will go a long way to keeping things from getting out of control.
Anonymous wrote:I would’t call the police or school but I would think you were stupid and tacky.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a major city center and a complicated social scene. It’s not some yokel barn dance. Just chill
Anonymous wrote:You can report it. But to get an actual action, you need an actual report in DC. It can be de-sanitized after the fact.
Also good luck in DC anyway. Chances of shutting anything like that down is close to zero. First, you can’t even call before 10pm or they’ll ignore you. By the time they come, issue a warning, come again etc, the party is over.
This is a very stupid rabbit hall.
The point is most people think you are way overreacting or these parties wouldn’t be happening with this many kids all the time. Do you think they all snuck out the window? Christ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of your kids gone to an unofficial/social media publicized anti-prom? This is the night before prom at a pricy venue-invites are on social media and “everyone” knows the kid whose family is throwing it. My questions are-is this a thing? And, if so, wtf?
If you know where it is and when it is, call the non-emergency police number and let them know that you are aware of this large under-age event going on and that there will likely be under-aged drinking, etc going on. The up-front police presence will go a long way to keeping things from getting out of control.
Wow. I would subpoenae that call if you shut my party down and publish your name on the school chat app. Karen did it!
It's a fairly trivial matter to do this anonymously, if they were so inclined, so have fun with that wild goose chase!
It’s actually not. I was able to find stuff like that out with one call to the precinct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious about the pro anti-prom people-what are the benefits (given that kids have smaller parties all the time?) Why the night before the school’s prom? Would you really not worry about liability? Not being snarky I’m really wondering
These are the whack-o type parents that get confused easily and lose track that their children need a true PARENT, not a FRIEND. Their kids have friends and they would be better served if their parents actually did the parenting thing rather than the friend thing.
Bwahaha. Oy, the middle class existence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of your kids gone to an unofficial/social media publicized anti-prom? This is the night before prom at a pricy venue-invites are on social media and “everyone” knows the kid whose family is throwing it. My questions are-is this a thing? And, if so, wtf?
If you know where it is and when it is, call the non-emergency police number and let them know that you are aware of this large under-age event going on and that there will likely be under-aged drinking, etc going on. The up-front police presence will go a long way to keeping things from getting out of control.
Wow. I would subpoenae that call if you shut my party down and publish your name on the school chat app. Karen did it!
It's a fairly trivial matter to do this anonymously, if they were so inclined, so have fun with that wild goose chase!
It’s actually not. I was able to find stuff like that out with one call to the precinct.
Omg you called? Are you the host?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious about the pro anti-prom people-what are the benefits (given that kids have smaller parties all the time?) Why the night before the school’s prom? Would you really not worry about liability? Not being snarky I’m really wondering
These are the whack-o type parents that get confused easily and lose track that their children need a true PARENT, not a FRIEND. Their kids have friends and they would be better served if their parents actually did the parenting thing rather than the friend thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of your kids gone to an unofficial/social media publicized anti-prom? This is the night before prom at a pricy venue-invites are on social media and “everyone” knows the kid whose family is throwing it. My questions are-is this a thing? And, if so, wtf?
If you know where it is and when it is, call the non-emergency police number and let them know that you are aware of this large under-age event going on and that there will likely be under-aged drinking, etc going on. The up-front police presence will go a long way to keeping things from getting out of control.
Wow. I would subpoenae that call if you shut my party down and publish your name on the school chat app. Karen did it!
It's a fairly trivial matter to do this anonymously, if they were so inclined, so have fun with that wild goose chase!
It’s actually not. I was able to find stuff like that out with one call to the precinct.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why this is an issue. Rich parents of one or more kids planned a big lavish blowout party for teenagers to attend. okay, fine. Like any teenage party there are going to be risks of drugs, alcohol, and various behavior, and I hope that the event is adequately chaperoned. And yes, there will be kids who are not invited and they (or their parents) will be bummed, plus other kids whose parents don't allow them to go, plus kids who do go, but for one reason or another have a bad time once they get there. I get it - teenage years are hard, for the teenagers and their parents. And, in a wealthy area like DC, some teenage parties will be unnecessarily glitzy. But aren't these all normal regular issues - why is this unusual or worthy of debate?