Children missing? Insure the State didn't steal them!
Apr 14, 2015 10:40:58 GMT -6
Glencairn likes this
Post by Deleted on Apr 14, 2015 10:40:58 GMT -6
This story blows me away for the 'big brother' nanny state mentality it shows. Our kids..aren't our kids. They belong to the state. Ask the state and someone will helpfully explain just how little power you have, if someone in the State determines you don't deserve it anymore.
In this case? Imagine finding your kids missing. You give them a little freedom, and let them walk to and from the local park or other nearby areas. it is Silver Spring Maryland, which simply means, it isn't a rough and tumble ghetto, but middle to upper middle class suburban Washington D.C., as a mental image for this.
Just walking along, minding their own business...and they are abducted in broad daylight. Not by a molester or killer...but by authorities you might think were thinking of the children, not their own agendas. That would be a poor assumption, as I will show here....
Source
It actually came to almost 6 hours, to be exact on the matter. This article wasn't exact, but it was the first one I saw on the case, which also left a couple other details out here. Important details.
You see...this family, the children and the circumstances weren't unknown to the CPS and Police. They didn't happen upon the kids as a 'gee..who are these two young tykes?'. Oh...Hardly. They knew precisely who they were taking and stuffing in their patrol cars for use as leverage against the parents. There is something the CPS has demanded they do ...again...from the past history of this situation.
Here is.....the rest of the story.
Again, you ask? yes...Again. It seems the nanny-staters in Maryland are already sensitive to this family, so when a citizen made a concerned call? Oh, they didn't hestitate to lie to the kids, so they'd get in the car...and then hold them as pawns until the parents obeyed, as ordered.
It sounds like Maryland timed this to get the second case in, just under the wire of the family's appeal to the first case. Coincidence....I'm sure. Just pure quinky dink, right?
Source
Yes....I would rethink it too, after having this happen. There is a danger on the Silver Spring streets, and it isn't Chester the Molester. It's authority who are busy snatching kids within short distance of their own homes, for the horrible crime of actually being outdoors without overlapping layers of protection and parents a half step away.
Free nation? Yes..in some ways, America is still a free nation. In others? It's as free as your leash and its length. Tug it too hard, and they'll hang ya by it.
In this case? Imagine finding your kids missing. You give them a little freedom, and let them walk to and from the local park or other nearby areas. it is Silver Spring Maryland, which simply means, it isn't a rough and tumble ghetto, but middle to upper middle class suburban Washington D.C., as a mental image for this.
"On a sunny Sunday afternoon, when children should be playing outdoors and enjoying the weather, Danielle and Alexander Meitiv's children were subjected to a terrifying detainment that no child should have to experience. Shockingly, the Meitiv children experienced this maltreatment at the hands of the very government officials who are entrusted to uphold the law and ensure that children in need are taken care of," the family's lawyer said in a statement Tuesday.
Just walking along, minding their own business...and they are abducted in broad daylight. Not by a molester or killer...but by authorities you might think were thinking of the children, not their own agendas. That would be a poor assumption, as I will show here....
"Well the policeman said we will give you a ride home when we were like two blocks away. So we got into the car and then about two and half hours later, instead he brang us here," Rafi Meitiv said, referring to CPS.
According to the Meitiv's lawyers, the police demanded that the children get into a police car. The children told police they wanted to call home, but police did not allow them to call. The agency did not contact the Meitiv's for three hours, leaving the parents frantically searching for their missing children.
According to the Meitiv's lawyers, the police demanded that the children get into a police car. The children told police they wanted to call home, but police did not allow them to call. The agency did not contact the Meitiv's for three hours, leaving the parents frantically searching for their missing children.
It actually came to almost 6 hours, to be exact on the matter. This article wasn't exact, but it was the first one I saw on the case, which also left a couple other details out here. Important details.
You see...this family, the children and the circumstances weren't unknown to the CPS and Police. They didn't happen upon the kids as a 'gee..who are these two young tykes?'. Oh...Hardly. They knew precisely who they were taking and stuffing in their patrol cars for use as leverage against the parents. There is something the CPS has demanded they do ...again...from the past history of this situation.
Here is.....the rest of the story.
A Maryland family -- the subjects of national headlines when they were accused of neglect for letting their children, ages 6 and 10, walk home alone from a park -- are under investigation again. This time, the children were taken into custody by police officers and held for hours by police and Child Protective Services, according to the family.
Again, you ask? yes...Again. It seems the nanny-staters in Maryland are already sensitive to this family, so when a citizen made a concerned call? Oh, they didn't hestitate to lie to the kids, so they'd get in the car...and then hold them as pawns until the parents obeyed, as ordered.
Earlier this year, they were found responsible for "unsubstantiated" child neglect, according to the Meitivs, for allowing their children to walk home by themselves from a park that was about a mile from their house on a Saturday afternoon in late December.
"We are shocked and outraged that we have been deemed negligent for granting our children the simple freedom to play outdoors," Meitiv wrote in an email to CNN last month, saying the family plans to appeal. (That appeal is expected to be filed in a few days, the family's lawyer said.)
"We are shocked and outraged that we have been deemed negligent for granting our children the simple freedom to play outdoors," Meitiv wrote in an email to CNN last month, saying the family plans to appeal. (That appeal is expected to be filed in a few days, the family's lawyer said.)
It sounds like Maryland timed this to get the second case in, just under the wire of the family's appeal to the first case. Coincidence....I'm sure. Just pure quinky dink, right?
After this latest incident, the family is rethinking letting their kids play or walk alone -- but not by choice, they said.
Yes....I would rethink it too, after having this happen. There is a danger on the Silver Spring streets, and it isn't Chester the Molester. It's authority who are busy snatching kids within short distance of their own homes, for the horrible crime of actually being outdoors without overlapping layers of protection and parents a half step away.
Free nation? Yes..in some ways, America is still a free nation. In others? It's as free as your leash and its length. Tug it too hard, and they'll hang ya by it.