I'm like a proud mama. My lil' ol' thread is up to 10 pages!
I think I know what you mean--but it sounds like you are calling it both illegal and legal at the same time.
Many shopping malls have loitering rules in place. The rules differ, but one mall about 30 minutes from here has guards walking in the common areas looking for this specifically. The security team warns the person (or group of people) suspected of just "hanging". They can then either move on or risk being told to leave. If they are told to leave and refuse, the police are called. There is no age limit - just a no loitering rule. There are no loitering signs posted everywhere, with the ordinance number and a list of fines. It works at that mall, and that is in NJ (where the kids can be a bit "problematic").
I am not saying that it can work everywhere, but I support this over discriminatory rules that sweep the good kids out the door with the bad. And I would never just drop my kids off someplace like this to hang with other kids, so this isn't personal. It is about doing the right thing for everyone, not doing something, anything, to stop a problem...
Sorry, guess you're not Catholic. A "near occasion of sin" doesn't mean that the situation will absolutely, positively and in all cases lead to bad choices, it just means that the conditions are more favorable for bad choices.
I'm sure there are plenty of kids who hang out at the mall who never do anything untoward...but for my family that was just a waste of time. We had sports teams we played on, music lessons to take and practice for, friend's houses to visit and friends who hung out at our house. It seems sad to me that not being able to hang out at the mall on two nights a week without an adult is viewed as such a deprivation to today's teens.
What a waste of $. Wonder how much extra security they'll have to hire and how many hrs of time it will take to continually enforce this. Not only will their sales drop, they'll also wind up wasting money on additional staff/security.
It's funny how places prefer to create new rules rather than enforce the ones they already have. Not saying mall did it, but generally speaking.
What she said. Please quote specific passages in the actual CONSTITUTION that gives rights to minors.
I don't think its a deprivation to today's teens. I just think its a dumb rule. Not that they should not control the environment, not that I don't think they should get rid of trouble makers. Just that teens shop too and teens reach an age that they don't like to shop without their parents. And for many, many malls if you put out the teens; you put out a large customer base.
My kids and I all had sports teams, music lessons and friends to visit too. I didn't mean that was the only thing any of us ever did. Teens like to be with teens and other teens are at the mall. And doing all the other things during the week is what makes it hard for the kids to go during the time they are allowed.
Guys, the Constitution does not give us rights. Our rights come from our creator. We are all created equal - people of every age, race, religion, creed have the same rights. We are born with those rights - we don't achieve them at a specific age. The only place where that has been altered by the Constitution are where exceptions are explicitly made in amendments.
The Constitution was created to limit the government, not to create the rights of the people. The only reason that some rights are actually listed is because the writers thought them to be the ones most likely to be abused by the government in the future, so a "Bill of Rights" was created as the first set of "amendments" to the Constitution.
So, our rights are almost boundless. Yes, private institutions also have rights, but don't pretend for a second that their rights are the only ones that matter to the Justice Department. And, even when private institutions are allowed by the courts to discriminate, it is still discrimination. It is still an action driven by prejudice toward a group of people. That is not something that I will support...
Again, how do they determine if they are loitering? What if they are pausing to rest in their shopping?...
No, we should allow the parents to make those decisions. Parents also have rights. If the child disagrees with the parent's decision, he/she can sue and let the courts decide. There are many cases in which children have sued their parents and won...Fair enough. IAgain, by your reasoning, we should allow kids to smoke, drink and drive then?
Guys, the Constitution does not give us rights. Our rights come from our creator. We are all created equal - people of every age, race, religion, creed have the same rights. We are born with those rights - we don't achieve them at a specific age. The only place where that has been altered by the Constitution are where exceptions are explicitly made in amendments.
The Constitution was created to limit the government, not to create the rights of the people. The only reason that some rights are actually listed is because the writers thought them to be the ones most likely to be abused by the government in the future, so a "Bill of Rights" was created as the first set of "amendments" to the Constitution.
So, our rights are almost boundless. Yes, private institutions also have rights, but don't pretend for a second that their rights are the only ones that matter to the Justice Department. And, even when private institutions are allowed by the courts to discriminate, it is still discrimination. It is still an action driven by prejudice toward a group of people. That is not something that I will support...
Guys, the Constitution does not give us rights. Our rights come from our creator. We are all created equal - people of every age, race, religion, creed have the same rights. We are born with those rights - we don't achieve them at a specific age. The only place where that has been altered by the Constitution are where exceptions are explicitly made in amendments.
The Constitution was created to limit the government, not to create the rights of the people. The only reason that some rights are actually listed is because the writers thought them to be the ones most likely to be abused by the government in the future, so a "Bill of Rights" was created as the first set of "amendments" to the Constitution.
So, our rights are almost boundless. Yes, private institutions also have rights, but don't pretend for a second that their rights are the only ones that matter to the Justice Department. And, even when private institutions are allowed by the courts to discriminate, it is still discrimination. It is still an action driven by prejudice toward a group of people. That is not something that I will support...
No, we should allow the parents to make those decisions. Parents also have rights. If the child disagrees with the parent's decision, he/she can sue and let the courts decide. There are many cases in which children have sued their parents and won...
With all due respect, how many of you have ever been to the Hanes Mall on a weekend night?? I have......and it's not something I would do again...UNLESS they put this new policy in place. We're not talking about a few innocent teens shopping....we're talking about huge groups of them. It can actually be a frightening place......and they come in all shapes and colors, thank you very much![]()