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Crimewatch - Madeleine McCann
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Originally posted by russell View PostA better analogy would be leaving your doors and windows open in a high crime area with all your cash on the kitchen table and then complaining about it being stolen.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostIt's a daft and irresponsible thing to do, but for the reason the kid might turn the gas on or hurt themself, not because they might be kidnapped.
99 times out of a hundred you can leave a kid alone and the worst that happens the other time is they get a bruise or two, which is not really a problem in the grand scheme of things.
Living your life based around there being kidnappers waiting to steal your children is silly.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostUnfortunately little kids who can walk can go for a wander when you are in a shop with them and on a day out with them let alone when you are in a different room or when you are asleep.
You are only saved by nice people - adults and older children - who are around who spot a little kid on their wander who can either direct them back or keep them from going further.Comment
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostWDAS
Everyone alive has had near misses, "if only" moments, etc - whether driving, on holiday or parenting. You would have hit the other car if they hadn't noticed, your child falls down and happens to smack their head on the lawn rather than a rock, etc.
I have a 2 year old. If you look away, literally, for a minute, she will be doing something she's not meant to as she's at an age where she's challenging herself and her environment. Look away for 5 minutes, and something will definitely be happening. Go away for 30 minutes and, well, we all know. The people actually left their accommodation, and walked down the road to a restaurant, leaving the kids under their own supervision. This isn't taking your eye off them when you’re washing the dishes, this isn't answering the phone for 5 minutes and becoming distracted, or looking a little to long at a magazine in a shop, it is wilfully walking away from your kids, so you can have a meal, drink, dance, whatever. I think it is this that people have raised their eyebrows a little.Comment
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostLiving your life based around there being kidnappers waiting to steal your children is silly.
I didn't say basing your life around the possibility of kidnappers was what I'd recommend. The idea that they might need me in the night, or hurt themselves, or that the house might burn down [!], would be enough to dissuade me. Along with the fact that when I decided to have a baby, I also opted to put their needs before my own, which is what I believe a half decent parent does.
They decided that going for a meal was more important than their children, and most members of the public struggle with that concept.Practically perfect in every way....there's a time and (more importantly) a place for malarkey.
+5 Xeno Cool PointsComment
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostNo, because as far as I know that area is not famed for child-kidnappings. It's more like leaving your door unlocked and nipping to the post office - unless someone happens to come along trying all the doors, there is no problem at all. But just sometimes, someone does. It's therefore unwise to leave your door unlocked but you would never expect someone to stroll into your house in the middle of the day, just as you would never expect a kidnapper to come and steal your child.Comment
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostIt'd be interesting to see how many people can honestly put their hands up to the question 'who hasn't done anything daft and irresponsible?'
But not with my son. I have near miss moments - accidents. But I do not choose to put him at risk.Practically perfect in every way....there's a time and (more importantly) a place for malarkey.
+5 Xeno Cool PointsComment
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I'm not patronising you. I'm saying that any suggestion that they "deserved it" or "were to blame" are simply ridiculous. Being bad parents, or being selfish, is absolutely nothing to do with a predator on the hunt for a victim.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Originally posted by MaryPoppins View PostHhmm. But those things, those near misses, are a bit different.
Taking the decision to leave the building my child was sleeping in, to go and have dinner a few hundred meters away would not be an accident.
My opinion has always been that making this decision is different to sitting downstairs while my child is asleep upstairs, but by the same token they nor their daughter deserve what happened.
My sons are all way past the point where these concerns are valid, but it's simply common sense that if you can't be available to provide care for your children a babysitter is required, anything else is not sensible.
I wouldn't wish their situation on even my worst enemy, but they're certainly culpable to an extent simply through their negligence in leaving the children unattended. It's not like there was even an emergency that they as medics had rushed to help with, they went out on the lash and knowingly left the kids alone in the holiday accommodation.Comment
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