It didn’t jog my memory of the event, as I have no memory of the event to jog. I don’t live in California. If it made the news here, I don’t recall it. Anyway…
Great. So you’re point in bringing it up was…what?
And I’ll give this one more shot: The statistic is not in question. It is not, however, relevant in the present discussion. (Amber Alerts, application and efficacy of)
They’re not asking you for insights. They’re asking you to be on the lookout, and give them a call if you spot the bad guys.
Well, I certainly consider missing children my business, and believe that I have both a right and a duty to help out if possible. It’s part of being in a society. We’re supposed to look out for each other. If it was my kid, I’d want others to help, so I’ll help them when I can.
While I certainly agree that “endless television coverage”, the sort of media frenzy that often accompanies any such story, is both annoying and mostly useless, that’s not what we’re talking about. We’re talking about government-issued alerts designed to save a kids life, not sell advertising on a news show.