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What age is too young for a mobile phone?
40hz:
^Actually, in the case of Sandy Hook, the real danger was just about every police department in the state sent their tactical units in. There were so many hopped up young cops in riot gear with military grade hardware ready "to take decisive action" it's a wonder nobody was shot and killed by accident.
Stoic Joker:
+1 to both of the above as contagious anxiety infects both sides (cops vs. parents) causing the situation to escalate when they each start to play to their respective audiences.
mwb1100:
At the risk of this degenerating to a basement thread, police, parents and/or cell phones were not involved in any way in escalating what happened at Sandy Hook: http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2012/12/us/sandy-hook-timeline/
Cripes - there are plenty of more common and more mundane situations that happen every day that a phone would make things easier for kids or parents. For example, missing the bus or letting a parent know that you're going to stay after for some special project.
40hz:
At the risk of this degenerating to a basement thread, police, parents and/or cell phones were not involved in any way in escalating what happened at Sandy Hook: http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2012/12/us/sandy-hook-timeline/
-mwb1100 (September 03, 2014, 07:33 PM)
--- End quote ---
I'm not sure exactly what you meant by "escalating what happened." The situation was what it was. And nobody said anything about cellphones having anything to do with anything. Where is there anything that could potentially "degenerate" into a basement thread? :huh:
I was simply referring to the massive turnout of parents, police tactical units and fire rescue responders at the school prior to the resolution of the situation. There were a large number of heavily armed police with weapons drawn conducting car and area searches for a second suspected gunman, which turned out not to be true. I'm not knocking the police. It was a very bad scene with parents and kids all over the place while that was going on.. But any time you have a large number of civilians and armed police in close proximity - in a situation where law enforcement is actively looking for an unknown gunman - the likelihood of 'accidents' increases exponentially.
Hope that clarifies. :)
40hz:
Cripes - there are plenty of more common and more mundane situations that happen every day that a phone would make things easier for kids or parents. For example, missing the bus or letting a parent know that you're going to stay after for some special project.
-mwb1100 (September 03, 2014, 07:33 PM)
--- End quote ---
Agree.
See my earlier post here which said the same thing:
"From a parent's perspective, most small kids don't need a full fledged phone. They need the functional equivalent of a StarTrek communicator. They need to be able to communicate with "The Bridge" of "StarFleet" for instructions; to ask or get permission; to request a beam-up; or (worst case) to scream for help."
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