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The Incredible Lightness of Freedom
Townhall.com ^ | June 14, 2015 | Paul Jacob

Posted on 06/14/2015 12:28:48 PM PDT by Kaslin

Free, at last! Free, at last! Thank the Maryland Social Services Administration, we’re free at last!

Free to have our children walk down a Maryland street in broad daylight, anyway, without them stopped and detained for five-and-a-half hours by police and social workers. Without parents and children being threatened with separation.

Ahhh . . . it feels good.

Free, perchance, for the kids to skip or to jitterbug or do cartwheels down the sidewalk — as long as a youngster doesn’t accidentally bump into someone.

Respect the rights of others. Play safe now.

All these very old freedoms are new again, now that Deborah Ramelmeier, executive director of the Maryland Social Services Administration, a subsidiary of the state’s Department of Human Resources, has laid forth from her mighty public perch by the punch of the “send” button an official directive to the state’s Child Protective Services (CPS) addressing the issue raised in the Meitiv case.

You’ll recall that the Meitivs allowed their 10-year old son and 6-year old daughter to walk home together, alone and without a parent or guardian or attorney present, from a public park about a mile away from their home. The Silver Spring, Maryland, police picked up the two children last December and so began a Maryland CPS investigation of the Meitivs for neglect.

Goodness, walking home from a park is hardly playing with nitro.

Much has been made of the Meitivs’ status as “free-range” parents, which apparently means they let their kids walk home from the park — shocking, I know. As a local city council member pointed out, if this policy had been in effect when he was a kid, “All of our parents would have been in jail.”

Still, in March of this year, Montgomery County Child Protective Services determined that the parents in this case, Danielle and Alexander Meitiv, were indeed responsible for “unsubstantiated neglect.”

Now, in an American legal context, any charge that was “unsubstantiated” after months of investigation would be tossed out. But today’s America is apparently neither the historical nor the ideal America.

In government parlance “unsubstantiated” means, officially, “sorta guilty.” The agency threatened to keep a file open on the Meitivs for five years.

In the midst of threat, accusations, and fears, the CPS neglected to do the one sensible thing you’d expect: articulate a policy position defining just when and how or even if ever children were allowed out in public without constant and direct adult supervision.

In April, the Meitiv kids were again caught flagrantly walking home from a park. This time, the two were nabbed just blocks from home and held for more than five hours by police, then CPS, before their parents were informed and reunited with their children.

The two kids were simply scared to death that they’d be taken from their loving parents. You can probably imagine how the parents felt.

The adult Meitivs were bullied into signing a document that they would not allow their children outside the house, even in the front yard, without the parents being physically present. Otherwise, the parents were informed, they couldn’t take their children home.

Yet, just weeks ago, CPS reversed course with a letter to the Meitivs announcing that “neglect” had been ruled out in the first investigation of illegal park attendance and aggravated walking home — not the second arrest and five-hour sweating of the 10-year old and his 6-year-old kid sister, mind you, but the previous collar.

One heck of a rap sheet is being assembled.

This second investigation of the very same parents and children for doing the very same thing — walking home — is still ongoing and has yet to be resolved. One would think settling it in the first instance would suggest an easy resolution in the second instance of nearly identical behavior. But what do we know?

What’s needed, of course — for sanity’s sake — is some clarity about what smidgen of freedom our younger-ish citizens are to be allowed, and an explanation of what activities of what we once assumed to be normal life (like walking around in public without a license) will trigger arrest and incarceration or perhaps the eventual ripping away of children from the arms of their parents.

Then last week, in an otherwise boring, bureaucratic 23-page document, Ms. Ramelmeier of Social Services fame wrote and, accordingly, directed CPS that: “Children playing outside or walking unsupervised does not meet the criteria for a CPS response absent specific information supporting the conclusion that the child has been harmed or is at substantial risk of harm if they continue to be unsupervised.”

Shazam! Just like that, now “playing outside” and “walking unsupervised” are A-Okay for children. The kids won’t be arrested! And their parents won’t be investigated or threatened with losing their little ones!

Perhaps, too, we can even believe that CPS will soon drop their last pending and utterly ridiculous investigation of the Meitivs for neglect, for aiding and abetting the rearing of children independent enough to walk home from a park by themselves.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: Maryland
KEYWORDS: children; parents; socialservices

1 posted on 06/14/2015 12:28:48 PM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Great. The issue is resolved until the next child-kidnapping-rape-murder stranger-danger case comes along. Then, much like the flow of a kiddy soccer game, all the contestants will run over to the ball is NOW.


2 posted on 06/14/2015 12:37:45 PM PDT by sparklite2
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To: Kaslin

Here is Florida, exact location not specified, an 11yo boy, was locked outside his house for AN HOUR AND A HALF (90 minutes) and played in their fenced-in backyard while his parents were delayed by a traffic accident. It is unknown if the fact that there was a rainstorm (FLORIDA) aggravated the situation in spite of an available shed, but the parents were arrested for child abuse on the report by a neighbor.

Words fail but the absence of common sense SCREAMS!


3 posted on 06/14/2015 12:55:59 PM PDT by SES1066 (Quality, Speed or Economical - Any 2 of 3 except in government - 1 at best but never #3!)
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To: Kaslin

Hooray for sanity!


4 posted on 06/14/2015 1:21:51 PM PDT by geistklempner
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To: SES1066

Lot of nosy people in the world; if the kids not in danger these busybodies should, NEED to keep their faces out of other peoples business.


5 posted on 06/14/2015 1:45:36 PM PDT by 5th MEB (Progressives in the open; --- FIRE FOR EFFECT!!)
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To: SES1066

Having lived in Florida for over 25 years I can say that my experiences with child rearing really weren’t the best. In fact if you drive through just about any neighborhood you just might notice a ‘strange’ thing. Very few if any children playing outside.

Some might say it’s the heat, others might say that it’s helicopter parenting. For myself I would say that it was a combination of the heat and the availability of electronic entertainment. But whatever it is, I can say that the kids don’t play outside like I did in the middle of the last century.


6 posted on 06/14/2015 2:56:06 PM PDT by The Working Man
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To: Kaslin

“You’ll recall that the Meitivs allowed their 10-year old son and 6-year old daughter to walk home together,”

Good grief, Charlie Brown, when I turned six my older brother was a couple of months shy of nine and we were rambling the wilderness. We had to walk about a mile just to meet the school bus when I started first grade. He had to walk even farther the first couple of years before I started, not to school but to the nearest place the school BUS would stop. By the time he was ten he was plowing fields with a horse and by the time I turned ten HE had taught ME how to do the same. We were both seasoned farm hands before we turned twelve, using axes, saws and all kinds of other tools. It is really not natural for humans to remain children until age 40.


7 posted on 06/14/2015 5:55:13 PM PDT by RipSawyer (Racism is racism, regardless of the race of the racist.)
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To: The Working Man

“But whatever it is, I can say that the kids don’t play outside like I did in the middle of the last century.”

They don’t do a lot of things like they used to. I would have been a sixteen year old SCHOOL BUS DRIVER had I not made one stupid error on the driving test. South Carolina had that system for years and it worked very well. Back then by age sixteen most of us were acting as young adults who were still in school. I started working on the farm as soon as I could lift ten pounds and was capable of raising a crop on my own by twelve or so. We played outside unsupervised long before we started first grade. We used to get minor injuries of the sort that would have modern parents rushing to the emergency room and my mom would look, shrug, pour some mercurochrome on a cut and tell us to get back to work. Quite a few did as I did and went straight to the military out of high school thinking if not we would get drafted anyway so why not go for an easier life.


8 posted on 06/14/2015 6:06:52 PM PDT by RipSawyer (Racism is racism, regardless of the race of the racist.)
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To: Kaslin; Abundy; Albion Wilde; AlwaysFree; AnnaSASsyFR; bayliving; BFM; Bigg Red; ...

Free at last, free at last, thank whomever we’re free at last!

Maryland “Freak State” PING!


9 posted on 06/16/2015 5:51:12 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Cancer-free since 1988! US out of UN! UN out of US!)
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To: SheLion; Eric Blair 2084; -YYZ-; 31R1O; 383rr; AFreeBird; AGreatPer; Alamo-Girl; Alia; altura; ...

Nanny State PING!


10 posted on 06/16/2015 5:51:33 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Cancer-free since 1988! US out of UN! UN out of US!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Thanks for the ping!


11 posted on 06/16/2015 9:19:20 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
The photos I've seen of the parents on other sites put me off my lunch. Typical educated hippie liberals. But in this case, I think the heavy sarcasm about the CPS is justified.

Would I let my 6- and 10-year old kids walk home from that particular park in Silver Spring? Probably not. But as long as those parents don't sue the taxpayer (government) if their kids suffer stranger danger, it's their right to make this decision for their kids the way they want.

12 posted on 06/17/2015 1:42:17 PM PDT by Albion Wilde ("We've seen this before. There's a master race. Now there's a master faith." Benjamin Netanyahu)
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