The state of the USA:

  Forbidden Parenting
  https://www.zerohedge.com/political/forbidden-parenting
  
https://townhall.com/columnists/johnstossel/2020/03/04/forbidden-parenting-n2562973

    South Carolina mom Debra Harrell worked at McDonald's.

    She couldn't afford day care for Regina, her 9-year-old daughter, so she 
took her to work.

    But Regina was bored at McDonald's.

    One day, she asked if she could just play in the neighborhood park instead.

      "I felt safe there," tells me in my new video, "because I was with my 
friends and their parents."

      "She had her cellphone, a pocketbook with money in it," says Debra.

      "She had everything she needed."

    Regina was happy. Debra was happy.

    But one parent asked Regina where her mom was, and then called the police. 
Officers went to McDonald's and arrested Debra.

    In jail, they berated her.

      "You can't leave a child who is 9 years old in the park by herself!" said 
one officer. "What if some sex offender came by?"

    People interviewed by the media were also outraged.

      "What if a man came and just snatched her?" asked one.

    "This day and time, you never know who's around!" said another.

    But what are they talking about?

    Crime in America is way down, half what it was in the '90s. Reports of 
missing children are also down.

    If kids are kidnapped or molested, it's almost always by a relative or an 
acquaintance, not by a stranger in a park.

    Nevertheless, prosecutors charged Debra Harrell with "willful abandonment 
of a child," a crime that carries up to a 10-year sentence.

    They also took Regina away from her mom -- for two weeks. 

      "I would cry as night because I was really scared," Regina told me. "I 
didn't know where I was, or what was going on."

    Fortunately, attorney Robert Phillips took Debra's case for free. He didn't 
like the way police and media portrayed her.

      "Here was this black female that society gives a hard time. 'Welfare 
queens, living at home, not getting a job!' Well, that's what she was doing," 
he said.

      "She was out working, trying the best she could to take care of her 
child. And now we're beating her up because we didn't like the way she took 
care of her child."

    The cops said that Harrell should have sent her daughter to day care. But 
even if she could have afforded it, it's not clear that day care is safer.

      "We found 42 incidents of sexual molestations, rapes in day cares," said 
Phillips.

      "We couldn't find (in South Carolina in the last 20 years) a single 
abduction in a park."

    Philips blames people in my business for scaring people about the wrong 
things.

      "The media has brought up this 'stranger danger' to where, if you're not 
under the protective wings of mom and dad 24/7, then you're exposing your child 
to some unknown danger."

    That has frightened police and child welfare workers into taking absurd 
steps when parents leave children alone.

    In Maryland, police accused parents of child neglect for letting their kids 
roam around their neighborhood.
    
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/04/13/parents-investigated-letting-children-walk-alone/25700823/

    In Kentucky, after police reported a mom who left her kids in the car while 
she dashed into a store, child welfare workers strip-searched the kids to make 
sure they weren't being abused.
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2019/05/22/how-dare-she-dash-muffins/

    This doesn't protect kids. It mostly scares parents into depriving their 
kids of chances to learn.

      "When you don't let them spread their wings, that's when they get in 
trouble!" says Debra.

    She was fortunate that her case got enough attention that even Nikki Haley, 
then South Carolina's governor, asked that Regina be given back to her mom.

    Prosecutors finally dropped the child abandonment charge.

    It's just not right that when stranger kidnappings are increasingly rare, 
police and child welfare workers are more eager to punish parents who let kids 
play on their own.

      "A Utah law guarantees that giving kids some reasonable independence 
isn't 'neglect,'" says Lenore Skenazy, of the nonprofit Let Grow, "More states 
need this!"
      https://letgrow.org/

    Of course, some parents are so neglectful that government should intervene.

    But as lawyer Phillips put it, they should intervene "only if you are 
subjecting your child to a real harm. We should not have unreasonable 
intrusions by the government telling us every little detail how to raise our 
children."

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