Barrel of Fun
Abort, retry, fail
Did the parents of Sara Payne get the same treatment from the British press and public?
Barrel of Fun said:Did the parents of Sara Payne get the same treatment from the British press and public?
fatbadger said:I do find it interesting that the non-parents seem much more likely to blame the parents. I don't believe for one minute that only parents have a right to comment, but I do think that the non-parents need to consider what the parents say. Believe me, you cannot watch them all the time; indeed, I personally believe, despite the (tiny, tiny) danger it entails, you shouldn't watch them all the time. There's too much policing of children's lives going on already.
The evidence so far says to me that there's no blame to be attached to anyone other than the abductor, and that these poor, grieving parents should be left alone. They'll be blaming themselves enough, and will probably never stop doing that until the day they die, and they certainly don't need judgemental people getting on their backs. They must be devastated, and everyone should bear that in mind. Have a heart - don't judge.
¸.·´¯`·.¸><((((º> said:good post (speaking from a parent of 2's point of view). now await self-righteous knockdown from certain members of the board.
British Bulldog said:A child goes missing in Portugal and we start a poll on who is to blame so we can point the finger at them, There's a crash on the M25 and Algie points the finger of blame on a Polish driver and gets slated for it, Am I seeing double standards?
British Bulldog said:A child goes missing in Portugal and we start a poll on who is to blame so we can point the finger at them, There's a crash on the M25 and Algie points the finger of blame on a Polish driver and gets slated for it, Am I seeing double standards?
Barrel of Fun said:Captain Morgan Rum (Great tipple) - Do you think Sara Payne's parents were bad/irresponsible parents?
No. A child goes missing in Portugal during which there is a debate of over 200 posts on a thread - half way through which people start to question the behaviour of the parents. Then we debate the same thing on another thread which is 180 posts long and counting. And finally Lush has spotted that there might be a correlation between people's opinons and whether they have children. And interestingly, she's right - opinion is firmly split down the middle amongst parents, but heavily weighted on one side amongst non-parents.British Bulldog said:A child goes missing in Portugal and we start a poll on who is to blame so we can point the finger at them, There's a crash on the M25 and Algie points the finger of blame on a Polish driver and gets slated for it, Am I seeing double standards?
captainmorganrum said:BoF
(Since registering on here I've since discovered Mount Gay Rum, which is even nicer!)
I don't believe that Sara's parents were negligent.
Sara was 8 when she was abducted, she was in a place that her parents believed was safe.
Letting an 8-year old play outside in a place you think is safe is different from leaving three children (under three years of age) in a hotel room ....alone.
I can see the parallel you are trying to draw here, but personally I don't think there is much to link the actions of the respective parents.
I would let my boy play somewhere I believed was safe (when he reaches 8 years old), but I won't leave him alone at the moment, and for a good few years to come.
Simster said:No. A child goes missing in Portugal during which there is a debate of over 200 posts on a thread - half way through which people start to question the behaviour of the parents. Then we debate the same thing on another thread which is 180 posts long and counting. And finally Lush has spotted that there might be a correlation between people's opinons and whether they have children. And interestingly, she's right - opinion is firmly split down the middle amongst parents, but heavily weighted on one side amongst non-parents.
On the other hand, 6 people die on the M25 and on the very first reply, Algie points the finger at a foreign driver despite not knowing whether or not he was foreign at the time - and it's still not clear that it was the Polish driver's fault. Algie's post was insensitive and crass at best. His point might even be valid, but I'm afraid that was the wrong time to come out with it IMO.
Also a fair point - and what is particularly shite about that is that people have been reminded before now not to jump to conclusions with regards to rail fatalities.British Bulldog said:Fair point Simster now go and read the thread about a fatality on the railway line ( probably on page 2 now ) and see how many posters point the finger at somebody cimmiting suicide without knowing the facts of whether it was suicide, an accident or in fact a railwayman that was killed doing his duty.
True. But where in that thread did anybody attempt to draw correlations between the incident and the nationality of the people involved?Originally posted by British Bulldog:
Fair point Simster now go and read the thread about a fatality on the railway line ( probably on page 2 now ) and see how many posters point the finger at somebody cimmiting suicide without knowing the facts of whether it was suicide, an accident or in fact a railwayman that was killed doing his duty.
roz said:True. But where in that thread did anybody attempt to draw correlations between the incident and the nationality of the people involved?
The Wookiee said:I have a 3 year old son and I blame the parents