We didn't do that when we were kids. We were taught it was disrespectful behavior. The only time we ever rang a door bell and ran was with school mates on May Day. So maybe the parents need to be a little more vigilant with the children. I'm not saying what the shooter did was ok, I'm just saying people are no longer the same. Why? I don't know. I think it started to get bad with the lockdowns and it's just been nose diving ever since.Unfortunately, kids don't (and can't) yet have the long view. That's why societies have greater tolerance for "childish acts," including in the legal systems. The amygdala, which is responsible for decision-making and impulse control, doesn't fully mature until we reach about age 25.
Heck, the child who was killed was still two years off from being a teenager, never mind in his twenties. His murderer was 42.
How many times were we asked as children (or asked our children), "Why did you do that?" or "What were you thinking?" only to get the shrug and very honest answers, "I don't know why I did it." or "I wasn't thinking."
If a child can get shot for playing ding-dong-ditch, what should be the consequence for the almighty sins of cutting across a neighbor's lawn, playing in the street, being noisy, splashing in public pools, and so forth?
How extraordinarily intolerant we've become.
Times have certainly changed .....It's Texas. That governor lets people have as many guns as they want. I'm not surprised. Down in Florida, some of us boys did the same thing. We were 10 or 11. We never got shot, just yelled at.
I don't think any post has questioned.
Is answering a wrung door bell with a gun in hand or within reach to be able to open the door & shoot at a running target reasonable? To me this sounds premeditated.
I was a less than perfect child who — despite being taught to do be a good little girl — was occasionally guilty of the following heinous crimes: getting into mischief, sassing adults, not sharing my toys, not doing all my homework, glancing at a classmate's paper when I didn't know an answer, talking out of turn, shoplifting once or twice, ringing a doorbell or two and running away, and so forth.We didn't do that when we were kids. We were taught it was disrespectful behavior. The only time we ever rang a door bell and ran was with school mates on May Day. So maybe the parents need to be a little more vigilant with the children. I'm not saying what the shooter did was ok, I'm just saying people are no longer the same. Why? I don't know. I think it started to get bad with the lockdowns and it's just been nose diving ever since.
Must be terrible to live in the kind of fear that would lead someone to answer a doorbell ring with a gun in their hand. If not in their hand close enough to pick it up in time to shoot someone leaving their doorstep.Fear leads to anxiety resulting in a needless gun purchase, typically a pistol, and then a desire to brandish their new found immense power the way those uninitiated in firearms do.
Fear leads one to equate a random door bell ring to a home invasion.
@StarSong while all that is true to an extent, none of us were harrassing people intentionally and filming it. Things are just different now. I'm not saying the child had to pay with their life. I'm simply saying times are very different and very violent now. That's all the more I have to say on the matter.
That's what I was wondering too. Not that it excuses the trigger happy idiot, who I'm glad is being charged with murder. The child ran away for goodness sake. If the man wanted to make a point and scare him, he could have shot in the air. Gunshot would have still been heard and maybe that would've been enough to deter any further mischief. I hope he spends the rest of his miserable life in prison where he'll have plenty of time to consider the better choices he should have made.One article I have read in regards to this...it happened at 11:30 p.m. I wonder what parent would allow an 11 year old boy out that late. Am I so far behind the times?
It sounds like there was a family gathering that went late into the evening, as weekend gatherings are wont to do. The cousins wandered off and got into mischief. That's my take on it.That's what I was wondering too. Not that it excuses the trigger happy idiot, who I'm glad is being charged with murder. The child ran away for goodness sake. If the man wanted to make a point and scare him, he could have shot in the air. Gunshot would have still been heard and maybe that would've been enough to deter any further mischief. I hope he spends the rest of his miserable life in prison where he'll have plenty of time to consider the better choices he should have made.