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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    6,808

    Default Flash Mobs

    My question involves criminal law for the state of: Anywhere...

    As these increase.....I wonder....do parents have any idea where their kids are?

    Figure 20 kids all gang together into one of these to shoplift....that is 20 kids whose parents are.....clueless as to the actions of their kids.....


  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    38,867

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    flash mobs, like these?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AwzN4633mpI


    to your question; did your mother know where you were 100% of the time? I seriously doubt it. Heck, when I was young, especially in the summer time, I could be at friends houses or camping in nearby woods for a couple days at a time without showing up at the family home. Mom and dad generally knew who I was with but that was about it.

  3. #3

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    No, she's talking about "flash robs" like this.

    Flash Robs started in Philadelphia and spread across the U.S.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    6,808

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    The Hammer Time thing is hilarious.

    But the flash mobs robbing places....not so funny. There was one on the news yesterday....group of 20 teens that went and stole $200 pairs of pants from an upscale store.

    But I wonder how these teens are pulling off these flash robs and the parents don't notice? They don't say anything about those new clothes or other goods....

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Toledo, OH
    Posts
    16,307

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    We live in a world where both parents working outside the home has become the norm, and a lot of parents are just too tired to pay much attention.

    When snowstorms hit here and school is called off, my house is FULL of kids, because I'm the only Mom in the neighborhood at home. In some cases, I know more about a given kid than their parents do.

  6. #6

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    Quote Quoting LawResearcherMissy
    View Post
    We live in a world where both parents working outside the home has become the norm, and a lot of parents are just too tired to pay much attention.
    Actually, I think we are living in the age of single-parent households. As an example, in Philadelphia, according to the 2010 census, 34% of the households are single parent.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Toledo, OH
    Posts
    16,307

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    SC, yes, that's a huge contributing factor, too. There's a lot of regional variation, I'm sure.

    Also, we seem to have abandoned the idea of everyone looking out for everyone's kids. Worst-first thinking and "stranger danger" attitudes have more or less convinced people to keep to themselves and not get involved, to the detriment of the community.

    When I was growing up with my grandparents, everyone on the block knew who I was and where I belonged, and if I got distracted I could count on a neighbor telling me "Peach, your grandmother is looking for you." Now, neighbors look at each other with suspicion, and people complain about the kids instead of looking out for them. I've been called crazy to my face for opening my home to the neighborhood kids. What am I supposed to do? Let them stay locked out of their houses because their parents are already gone to work? Pffft. I'd rather have them here, shooting pool, playing XBox, and eating spaghetti than loose on the streets.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    1,376

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    I saw the one here in Wicker Park. I saw the one here at Lollapalooza too! It's crazy! You'd think that there would be some nervousness about such a brazen breach of the law, but there isn't. The sad thing is that, they realize that there is strength in numbers. Cities like Chicago and Philly have to designate police to more violent areas of crime and more violent crimes in general, that the response times are delayed when it comes to trying to stop these incidents. Meanwhile mommy(usually, no daddy) questions why their innocent baby was shot or arrested when they were on of the few that got caught doing one of these.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Posts
    8,006

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    Quote Quoting LawResearcherMissy
    View Post

    When I was growing up with my grandparents, everyone on the block knew who I was and where I belonged, and if I got distracted I could count on a neighbor telling me "Peach, your grandmother is looking for you."
    I remember when the other adults in the neighborhood could give you an attitude adjustment if it was called for. If you're told mom is looking for you and you don't start that way, they could grab ya by the ear and deliver you.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    1,376

    Default Re: Flash Mobs

    I remember when teachers could actually control a classroom. If you acted out, a quick phone call to your parents would straighten it out really quick. Parents didn't ask the teacher what they did wrong, they ask the kid!

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