Sounds like he really hates the old man, maybe it was as simple as not letting him have the car or as bad as incest. We don’t know the context but man he could have had free dope for years.
First, he didn’t say that was the only reason he was calling the cops, and second, do you honestly think this kid SHOULDN’T call the police, if his father is abusing him? Maybe that’s the only way he CAN get his father busted. But no, he shouldn’t call, he might ruin his father’s life because he’ll be caught growing WEED!!!
Christ. We’re not talking about a D.A.R.E. case here.
I don’t think you read post # 34. I don’t have all the details, but it sounds like a horrible situation for the boy and his grandmother, and he did the right thing in that situation.
I agree with you that he had to protect his grandmother and himself in any way possible. I also believe that the boy did what he had to do, and that his father got what he deserved.
This pretty much sums up how I feel. If the kid discovered dismembered murder victims in the garage, it would have been right to call the cops. But pot plants? I hope the kid someday learns that crimes exist on a continuum, and some things shouldn’t be crimes in the first place.
Actually, it being a zombie put it in a good context for me. I’m rather curious how the thing resolved, and how the kid and/or his father is doing this day. I wish a follow up had been done. I did a Google search and didn’t find anything. There was a hilarious op ed in IIRC marijuananews.com, or something like that. The little idiot actually said, of his father “He’ll probably blame me!” That was priceless.
But, at any rate, I wonder how the kid turned out. 10 years after ratting out ol’ dad. Did he get his college education, or is he a drunken wife abuser? Both? I’m also wondering, now, about that girl to whom President Bush the first gave the medal for doing the same thing. Has there ever been a follow up search/study on these kinds of things?
Or parents could hopefully someday learn not to do something illegal if they aren’t prepared to deal with the consequences.
Kids have their own sense of right and wrong, and are also prone to making mistakes. It’s not fair to put them in this situation.
And you weren’t mad at your brother for doing something could have screwed over your family? What if he had an ex-girlfriend or ex-best friend who was angry at him and told the cops about the pot? Children could have been removed to foster care.
The pot isn’t the point, the point was that he was doing something illegal that could have gotten people in trouble. He decided that violating a stupid law for his own fun was more important.
My brother lived on his own at the time, and my daughter had no right to go through his things. But I did get mad at my brother, he was basically a kid then himself, and has grown up, and learned from his mistakes.
However, as wrong as it was for my brother to grow two pot plants in his closet, I still believe that it was wrong for the school to put a child into the position of acting as a junior police agent within the family.
My daughter shared with me how films and speakers showed the children what to look for, and how important is was for them to call the police.
I question the ethics behind this. Exploiting a child’d desire to be a good little soldier, by making them into tools?
Because my parents raised me to know right from wrong and to have respect for the law. I wasn raised in an environment where that wouldnt have been going on anyway, hell they didn’t even drink, so it’s purely a hypothetical for me. I was home schooled so no DARE program to blame.
Thanks for the elaboration.
I have smoked cannabis for over 40 years and have a son who was went thru the D.A.R.E (to be stupid) program, I never hid what I was doing from him. While he was being subjected to the brainwashing at school we sat down and had a long talk about it and he was made to understand that turning me into the police would end up with him spending the rest of his childhood in the custody of Childrens Protective Services and living in foster homes.
He now smokes cannabis, is married and the parent of a 3 year old and will one day have to sit down and have the same talk with his child.
It shows just how wrong the eternal war on drugs has gotten when busting someone for enjoying a toke is more important than keeping a famly intact.
At about the same time we had a friend who was a Harris County Deputy Sheriff, she was trying to get appointed as a D.A.R.E. officer because it was a cushy job with the best hours and had a unlimited budget to buy cop toys with, according to her the D.A.R.E. officers always got to drive the very newest patrol cars and had the flashest equiptment to impress the kids with, all paid for with our tax dollars!
Peace
LIONsob
This is exactly why, from the time my kids were around six months of age, I would sit with them and talk. No distractions, a calm voice, soothing tones. And I’d tell them, above all, please remember, snitches get stitches.
To the law an’ order folks who’ve been posting, would you play the same tune if, say, going to church was a crime as is true with communism? Or if (assuming you like orange juice) it were made illegal?
The great majority of drug laws, and especially the drug war itself, are based on ignorant acceptance of the babble of a few mindless zealots like Harry Anslinger, or Tricky Dicky and his toadie drug advisors Jaffe, DuPont and Ambrose.
If the kid’s suffering abuse at home and nothing is being done by the authorities, then maybe, just maybe there was some justification for his actions. Otherwise, at best he was pathetically duped by lies and propaganda and having delusions of doing the right thing. At worst, he was as a previous poster said just a spoiled kid pissed off 'cause Dad wouldn’t give him the car keys.
If there was no other compelling reason than belief in lying authorities or a case of piss-off then I’d bet that, as many kids found out, their actions led to a world of hell for themselves and their families and accomplished absolutely nothing positive.
There is nothing heroic or moral about supporting unjust and destructive laws.