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Parenting and teenage parties

We had a family nearby that threw parties and supplied their kids with booze on the assumption they'd be safer there than driving somewhere.

That worked until one of most popular kids in the school fell down the stairs and laid there all night because the other kids thought he'd just passed out drunk. Turns out he was drunk, but also dead - I don't think it's ever been determined if he died from the fall or alcohol poisoning.

I'm 100% against parents throwing parties for their kids with alcohol involved. When my daughter had kids over and they movie nights in the basement, they knew DANC could show up at any moment and I also spread the rumor I had hidden cameras down there (I didn't).

I'll never forget the first sleepover my daughter went to. Same deal as your son - she called us before midnight and wanted to come home. Evidently some of the adults who were there were smoking - freaked her out. "Dad, even the grandma smoked!". lol
My parents didn't ever supply the bad habits, but they also made it clear that if we engaged in bad habits, there was no judgment as long as we were safe. Stay where we were, or call them for a safe ride if needed.

I think that's the right balance. I mean, we still turned out f*cked up, but we're breathing and not in prison. And that's not a small accomplishment from where we came.

Parenting and teenage parties

So Brad Jr. went to his first high school party last night. Kid he knew since elementary school threw it. He and a neighbor went together (walked to it).

30 minutes later they're back at my house. They left because it was "boring." About 100 kids, lots of girls, some dressed in quite revealing Halloween outfits (learned this from another neighbor whose daughter went and stayed until the end). Lots of alcohol there--beer, liquor. Parents knew, supplied some, and were there at the time. When I asked, so what was boring about it, Brad Jr. said "they were just standing around listening to music." (I'm guessing part of it was fear).

By 10 pm, several kids were hammered (per my other source) including a few girls who were "crossed"--for the uninitiated, that means both high and drunk. The parents then told the kids to leave (many kids also brought backpacks of booze into the party, by the way) and when they didn't go quickly, called the cops on their own party and it was broken up by the police.

So, for parents out there, how do you feel about this? I'm OK with my son experiencing it (and kinda wished he had stayed longer to see actual drunk people act stupidly and just get used to an environment like that) but am really turned off by parents hosting a party with booze for 14 and 15 year olds. I guess I'm a full-fledged parent now, because all I could think of was, what happens if one of those kids gets hit by a car while walking home hammered (this is an urban suburb, so everything is pretty close)? Or the girls get harassed, or worse, walking around at night, drunk, in a sexy outfit?
We had a family nearby that threw parties and supplied their kids with booze on the assumption they'd be safer there than driving somewhere.

That worked until one of most popular kids in the school fell down the stairs and laid there all night because the other kids thought he'd just passed out drunk. Turns out he was drunk, but also dead - I don't think it's ever been determined if he died from the fall or alcohol poisoning.

I'm 100% against parents throwing parties for their kids with alcohol involved. When my daughter had kids over and they movie nights in the basement, they knew DANC could show up at any moment and I also spread the rumor I had hidden cameras down there (I didn't).

I'll never forget the first sleepover my daughter went to. Same deal as your son - she called us before midnight and wanted to come home. Evidently some of the adults who were there were smoking - freaked her out. "Dad, even the grandma smoked!". lol

New Yorkers Lining Up for Trump

Worst part was he called out the one black guy in the audience when he did it. And you know that poor dude was only there because someone pulled him off the street and offered him $100 to stand around for a few hours in a Trump hat surrounded by white people and just make sure he walked in front of a camera once in a while.
Highly doubtful. So Cunty. All the time.

Your ass is showing. Guy was there because he’s a Trump supporter.

One conservative’s argument for a Harris vote

Seems to be a lot of herding in polls... Not many firms posting many outliers which makes me think they are all full of shit.
This is a really good point. A healthy polling environment will have a number of outliers. Most if not all of whom will turn out to be wrong. But their existence is expected in an environment that has relatively accurate, objective polls overall.
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