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LancYorkYankee 27-02-2007 03:00

Parental Responsibility?
 
As requested/recommended by my northern friend Billcat:

Where do you guys believe parental responsibilty should end? In my state, parents are held responsible when their kids are repeatedly absent from school. Is this a good idea? Is this the same in England?

Do you believe parents should be held financially responsible when their under 18 year old children cause damage to someone elses person, place and/or property? Are they ever held responsible in England?

When does/should this responsibility end? I believe as long as a parent still considers their child as a dependant (I believe that can be up to 21 years old) they should be held somewhat responsible. Heck, the kid is coming and going from their home.

Over here (I believe), regardless of a vehicle's ownership, if some drug dealing kid is driving around in the family car, and drugs are found in it, the police can/will conviskate the vehicle. Do you think this is fair to Mom and Dad?

Same (I believe) is true for a kid selling drugs out of his/her parents residence. The house can be conviscated by the state. That's regardless of the parent's, spouse's, children's knowledge. Ya thnk that's fair? Do you think it serves as a bit of a deterrent? I do.

Brian

WillowTheWhisp 27-02-2007 07:33

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Here parents are held responsible for a child truanting from school - which is a bit difficult for parents sometimes when they take the kid to school, see the kid go through the school gates and in the door and then the kid bunks off unknown to the parent and spends the rest of the day hanging about round town with their mates.

If parents are at work what can they do?

I know some do keep their children at home to help them with shopping or housework and that is ludicrous. They should be held to account, as well as the ones who don't give a hoot where their kids are during the day.

cashman 27-02-2007 08:00

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
agree with willow about the school thing, the other things you mention LYY. seem very draconian re- confiscate the house if drug dealing With or Without the parents knowledge. With- fine, Without- ludicrous.

grego 27-02-2007 08:43

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
I think parents should be responsible till around 18, I think after that regardless to whether they are still living at home it would be difficult for a parent to control their then adult child. The child has to take responsibility for themselves, I think taking the house is OTT, the car, if the parent knows their child is taking drugs, and the signs are usually obvious, then surely they should stop them from driving their car, if its the childs car then if its confiscated its their own problem, dont know if I make sense there or not.

LancYorkYankee 27-02-2007 17:22

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
I guess my main frustration with "the system" both here and over there is the rampant hoodlumism. Between anger and discouragement, I see the chavs over there, and the gangs here, causing mayhem.

Seems things are a bit more strict here but we still have kids dropping out of school at 16 (which is for some reason allowed) and just hanging out around town. You guys have the break ins, the vandalism, the disrespect of older folks, etc..

I guess I was just throwing out ideas to alleviate the frustration I feel at the hooligans. Also because one of the boys (17) I've tried to help raise has been sentence to juvinile detention. He's broke his Grandparents heart as well as ours. (His Mum died of a drug overdose when he was 2 and no idea who the dad is).

This kid started going bad 4 years ago. I couldn't convince his Grandparents (next door neighbors) of the danger in their leniency. He should have been put into juvi. 2 years earlier for stuff done. His Grandparents always came to his rescue.

LancYorkYankee 27-02-2007 17:28

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Also, this same kid stole his Grandparents car, was drinking and driving, and totalled the car by smashing through a fence. Grandparents car, grandparents responsibility. Now how can't that be wrong? The little #$@.:(

The next day who was off fixing the fence, the 70 year old Grandfather!:(

steeljack 27-02-2007 18:37

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
For young-uns getting into trouble, (graffitti , vandalism and general hooliganism) I think parents are responsible till they reach 18 yrs. If darling little Kevin or Staci or Jason screw up and get fined its up to the parents to make sure they pay, if they dont pay send in the bailiffs and take the 42" plasma screen tv away as a wake up call . Any kid caught road racing or drunk driving under 18 in Dads car ........sorry the car goes into the crusher , if the Dad whinges that he didn't know, the kid is guilty of grand theft .
Here in California the schools recieve financing thru attendance , so much per child per day , so if a kid is missing the school looses X amount , a bit of an incentive to the slurpee slurping administrators and lazy-assed school cops to chase down absentees .

:eek: :eek:

garinda 27-02-2007 18:46

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Sometimes showing love by being too forgiving, is the worst thing you can do for a child.

Spare the rod, spoil the child.

LancYorkYankee 27-02-2007 19:15

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Both good points Steeljack and Rindy. Just as the Mum letting her son get so large, same goes for parents over here who let their 12 year olds smoke, drink, and chew tobacco. Like father like son. Okay that's mostly some of the more hillbilly folks but still, what are these parents thinking?

Brian

Billcat 27-02-2007 19:52

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by LancYorkYankee (Post 389640)
Seems things are a bit more strict here but we still have kids dropping out of school at 16 (which is for some reason allowed) and just hanging out around town.

That's an easy one. It only takes one student who does not want to be in class to halt the entire learning process for the kids who do want an education. Get the problem chld our of the classroom, so that others may benefit.

Also, the job title is teacher, not juvenile warden!

Billcat 27-02-2007 19:57

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by cashman (Post 389323)
agree with willow about the school thing, the other things you mention LYY. seem very draconian re- confiscate the house if drug dealing With or Without the parents knowledge. With- fine, Without- ludicrous.

And frankly, I think that confiscation of property prior to a conviction is wrong. It's a little matter of due process!

Billcat 27-02-2007 20:05

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Interesting article on asset forfeiture:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl...orfeiture.html

Here is an excerpt, which is just one of the problems with the current system in the USA:


"According to a report prepared for the Senate Judiciary Committee, at least 90 percent of the property that the federal government seeks to forfeit is pursued through civil asset forfeiture. And although forfeiture is intended as punishment for illegal activity, over 80% of the people whose property is seized under civil law are never even charged with a crime according to one study of over 500 federal cases by the Pittsburgh Press."

Punishment without conviction. It's a revolting concept, in my opinion.

Ianto.W. 27-02-2007 20:13

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
I think the parental responsibility for paying the price of their childrens 'crimes' etc, ends with the investigation of the parents finances which usually come up with little or no credit, so the persuit of compensation becomes a fruitless exercise.

steeljack 27-02-2007 20:17

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ianto.W. (Post 389842)
I think the parental responsibility for paying the price of their childrens 'crimes' etc, ends with the investigation of the parents finances which usually come up with little or no credit, so the persuit of compensation becomes a fruitless exercise.

you can be sure that not many of these folks are watching the latest episode of Coronation st. on 12" black and white TV ........;) ;)

Ianto.W. 27-02-2007 20:24

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by steeljack (Post 389849)
you can be sure that not many of these folks are watching the latest episode of Coronation st. on 12" black and white TV ........;) ;)

By the time they have been seized stored and auctioned the money left for dispersal is nil, these people do not purchase anything worth selling they are more st wise than their kid's, like father like son.

West Ender 27-02-2007 20:29

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
As Willow says, parents here are held responsible for children not attending school but the Courts seem to be very lax towards the parents when it comes to juvenile crime. If the parents knew, for a certainty, that they would be punished in equal measure if their child did wrong I think it would encourage them to exercise a bit more discipline.

As things are the child who is caught doing wrong screams Human Rights, the Child Psychologist comes in with an excuse such as he was potty-trained too early and says he has ADHD, demeaning those poor kids who really do have it, and the parents say, "He's no angel (I'm sick of that phrase, they always say it - in other words he's a little swine) but he's a good boy really" and the kid gets off with a slapped wrist and continues to behave abominably because he knows he can get away with it.

Billcat 27-02-2007 20:34

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by steeljack (Post 389849)
you can be sure that not many of these folks are watching the latest episode of Coronation st. on 12" black and white TV ........;) ;)

Oooh! A color TV! Owning one suddenly turns you into Bill Gates? Given the resale value of a used one, combined with the costs of confiscation and sale, hardly worth the government's time to confiscate it. LOLOL! :D

garinda 27-02-2007 23:23

Re: Parental Responsibility?
 
I watched a television programme last night were a group of people were setting light to abandoned stolen cars, setting them on fire, and then ambushing the fire brigade that came to put out the fire.

It was two o'clock in the morning, and this group of people were children aged about eleven and twelve.

They are children!

Where were the parents?

Are the parents criminally responsible?

You bet.

If they consistantly exhibit bad parenting skills, they should me imprisoned, and the children put in care.

Sad, but the children may have a better chance than being brought up by these feckless idiots, who in my opinion should be sterilised.


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