I don't know if this is serious or someone having a laugh.When I contacted child protection services by phone they asked me for names, descriptions, addresses, parents names, ages, etc, etc, etc. I told them repeatedly that running investigations into potential harm was a matter for them and the Guards. I suggested that for a change instead of waiting for harm to occur, they intervene at an early stage and try to minimise it. The person I spoke to shared my concerns about exposing children to gambling activity at any level and acknowledged the problem I saw, but didn't see a role for them as they had no names etc. They insisted on taking the conversation around in circles repeating questions I'd already answered.
Once again we appear to have one of these quangos that only reacts when harm has occurred. What happened to adopting a proactive (the most abused and misunderstood word in Irish public service) role and preventing harm in the first place? Listening to what my contact said today "protection" has no place in the name or activities of the organisation concerned although I accept they may have an important role to play in the recovery of a damaged child. They asked me if a crime had been committed and I repeated that was a matter for them and the Guards to establish given that I had voiced my concerns to the appropriate agency. I ended the the conversation by asking if they understood why I wouldn't be quizzing children about their names etc. They acknowledged that they understood and also at some stage managed to drag GDPR into the conversation!
Disappointing to say the least, but not quite as disappointing as Leo's disgusting question above.
[EDIT] reduce redundancy
I don't find the observed facts as presented the least bit funny. If you find the matter potentially risible then we are in much deeper trouble than I suspected.I don't know if this is serious or someone having a laugh.
There was a video on TikTok of a woman who phoned 911 to complain that her kids were fighting with each other and can the police come and sort it out. The dispatcher asked "Do you want the police to shot them?"
What do you want? The children place in foster care because their parents sent them out door to door selling for a fund raiser*? (*this is an assumption because you never established what they were selling it for).
It certainly is not well known to me that they are "unstafffed" as I spoke to to people in their offices this week. They are certainly not "unresourced" as they have premises, staff (at least two I spoke to), a website that's more about self-aggrandisement than protecting children, and according to that web-site, substantial annual budgets.It is well known that child protection services are unstaffed and unresourced yet you want them to spend time chasing up on a frivolous case where children are clearly in no danger and are just doing some fund raising.
Where did I post that I was approached about predicting any future event by the two children last Sunday? As you weren't a witness to what happened, where did this version of events come from?There is a very good reason why lottery type activities involving the prediction of future events are treated entirely differently in the legislation. No gambling addict was ever created spending €2 to win a box of chocolates.
Perhaps just remain happy that children are allowed participate in activities that further their development and prepare them for the real world and they don't have a crank for a neighbour they need to hide fromAnyway should I call the gardai? Or warn their parents? Or just tell the kids not to run draws and stick to the selling of cookies.
Given you raised the concern, how about you point me to evidence that selling a few raffle tickets results in gambling addictions or worse? All my peers grew up doing it and I can't say I know anyone who is a problem gambler, most don't partake at all.Please point me to any sources documenting the benefits of exposing children to gambling activities by calling on strangers doot-to-door unsupervised by a responsible adult.
Pre-teen in my estimation, the youngest probably less than ten.Just curious about the age of the children.
You reported children to the gardai and children protection for selling raffle tickets!!!I don't find the observed facts as presented the least bit funny. If you find the matter potentially risible then we are in much deeper trouble than I suspected.
If the best you can do is to refer to a low-rent social media post from the USA about shooting children then I despair.
I have made it abundantly clear what I want to happen - I want the activity described, unaccompanied children selling gambling products door-to-door, stopped because it places them at risk. If you see the issue I raised as frivolous, then I'm grateful for those with more caring and insightful perspectives.
It certainly is not well known to me that they are "unstafffed" as I spoke to to people in their offices this week. They are certainly not "unresourced" as they have premises, staff (at least two I spoke to), a website that's more about self-aggrandisement than protecting children, and according to that web-site, substantial annual budgets.
I never reported the children for selling raffle tickets. Read my posts.You reported children to the gardai and children protection for selling raffle tickets!!!I find the whole incident extremely funny and so incredible I still don't fully believe it.
About the only thing we agreed on during the phone call. This person, presumably a qualified professional in the field, saw the activity I reported as problematic. So where does that leave the glorious keyboard warriors on AAM? I suggest contacting your local child protection services and hear what they have to say to you, then maybe you can express better-informed opinions.The person I spoke to [EDIT: in our child protection services quango] shared my concerns about exposing children to gambling activity at any level and acknowledged the problem I saw, but didn't see a role for them as they had no names etc.
read the OP. I provided two areas for concern, one shared by child protection services.You raised a concern based on what most people would consider a perfectly normal childhood activity, one the majority of children raised here are involved in at one point or another. You have provided no basis whatsoever for your concern. Even the gambling addiction services campaigning on childhood gambling addiction make no reference to this in their long list of activities that potentially introduce children to gambling.
I've searched the academic portals for any evidence linking risk of gambling addiction or other developmental issues to engagement in fundraising including raffles, funnily enough there's nothing there.
Do you honestly have nothing better to be doing with your life? I don't think I've ever seen someone react to something so trivial in such an overblown, hysterical manner. It's actually incredible to me that you don't see an issue with attempting to land the authorities on the doorstep of these kids' parents because they dared to sell a few raffle tickets for something you didn't even bother to find out about.I never reported the children for selling raffle tickets. Read my posts.
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