Lush said:I started the poll because I felt that it was difficult for people to voice their true opinions about the subject. If you don't think the parents are to blame you run the risk of being called a bad parent yourself - which let's face it, no-one likes to hear.
It is also very easy and attractive to present yourself as a paragon of virtue when it comes to taking care of children.
I was also interested in how many people are actually in the position of having to judge what is right/wrong, safe/unsafe for their own children 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Lord Bracknell said:I remember a hot, sunny day on Broadstairs beach. Our three children were aged 6 weeks, 22 months and 4 at the time. It was a very crowded beach and the tide was coming in. The 4 year-old went missing and it was the best part of half an hour before I found him - helping another 4 year-old to build a sand castle. As far as I was concerned, it was not a pleasant half hour. The 4 year-olds were quite happy, though.
Our "fault" for irresponsible holiday behaviour?
Would it have been better not to visit the beach in those circumstances?
Over to you, NSC ...
However, what I have also found interesting is that there is a far greater fear of paedophilia amongst the younger parents on here. Which is not to say that I didn't give abduction a second thought when my sons were young but certainly my greatest concerns were about accidents and injuries. So it was getting the right balance between encouraging independence and not giving children the sort of freedom that they weren't capable of managing safely that was always one of my biggest dilemmas. That someone might steal my child if I took my eyes of it was not something that was uppermost in my mind. That it might cross the road and get run over was! [/B]
But what might have happened?Conkers said:The circumstances are totally different, the only thing in common is that a child went missing.
Lord Bracknell said:But what might have happened?
Jimbo26 said:Does this subject really require a poll ?
Starry said:I'd compare your situation to theirs had you taken your children to the beach, dropped them off and gone to the pub for a drink while they played.
I'd assume that since you were there you were supervising your children and keeping them safe to the best of your ability, no parent has eyes in the back of their head and children do wander off, thankfully, when you are there you tend to notice far quicker than if you'd been in the pub down the road instead of looking after them.
My son is a runner and ever since he could walk he has dashed off the minute he is out of the car, trolley, pushchair, there have been countless times I've 'lost' him.
rospants said:i dont have kids, but the parents are purely to blame because if they were responsible we wouldnt be having this poll. But i suppose thier actions are something they are going to have to live with for the rest of their lives no matter what the outcome is
Yorkie said:Jamie Bulger got lost for a moment.
It isn't as black & white as people think, it was a restaurant, reported to be only 40 yds away (altho accounts vary) in a secure compound.