Police Chief: Don't Let Your Children Go Outside Until Age 16

Or else they will be sex-trafficked.

|

Inside
Hpphoto / Dreamstime

The New Albany, Ohio, chief of police is advising parents not to let their kids go outside on their own until they are 16.

According to this piece on News10:

New Albany's police chief wants parents to understand that kids younger than 16 simply cannot defend themselves against an attacker.

Chief Greg Jones says 16 is the appropriate age to allow children to be outside by themselves. "I think that's the threshold where you see children getting a little bit more freedom," he says.

Not a lot of freedom, mind you. Just a "little bit." His stay-close-to-mommy rationale?

While the ultimate decision comes down to parents and personal preference, he says no matter how mature a child may seem, it's what happens after a child is abducted that is the greatest concern.

Not if, but when a child is abducted. That's how he's thinking of childhood: You go outside, you get abducted, and then you have to deal.

So let's take a little look at New Albany'c crime record. Here it is. Last month the town of 8,829 logged—hmmm, let me get out my calculator—two whole counts of criminal activity. One case of burglary/breaking and entering,  and one "other."

Unless that "other" was "crimes against humanity," I'm not sure just how many kids are being abducted right and left by strangers. But the chief insists: "What if you were to allow them to take off at 7 or 8 and you don't hear from them for a while, where would you begin? What would you do? How would you even know what happened to them?"

This is just a classic an example of worst-first thinking: You think of the worst-case scenario first, no matter how far-fetched, and proceed as if it's likely to happen. 

The article goes on to describe the over-subscribed SafetyTown lessons the police are giving kids, and quotes moms who are eager to instill stranger danger in their children (even though more than 90 percent of crimes against children are committed by people they know):

"We've never really had the talk with him about what to do to be cautious with other people that he doesn't know," says Shannon Jap, who enrolled her son Oliver, who is 5-years-old. "My son loves to say hi to everybody and he just goes up to people when we're in restaurants and we just want to make sure that he knows to be careful when he's talking to people," she adds.

Chief Jones says that's the ultimate goal of safety town is to teach children than bad people can seem nice too.

"Strangers aren't always mean," says the Chief.

And nice people, like police chiefs, aren't always right.

Here's how New Albany's website describes the town:

[A] vibrant, pedestrian-friendly community with an unparalleled commitment to education, wellness, culture and leisure that inspires and enriches families and businesses alike.

I'm not sure that wellness and leisure correspond with keeping kids indoors, frightened, unfriendly, and infantilized.