[quote="wantokmeri"]I wish they'd investigate and punish child abusers with the same righteous red-heat anger they used when they found out that kids were kissing on base. Have a special chapel where everyone sat there in silence until the spirit led them to get up and confess their evil ways. Pressure all parents, siblings, schoolmates, teachers to rat out the evildoers. Fly in leadership, expel, suspend, fill up the personnel files with the horrible unnatural deeds of teenagers being teenagers. I'm dying over the list of cookies vs. shoplifting!!!! hilarious!! Being a normal teenager and kissing a boy is defintely SHOPLIFTING. It took me decades to overcome weird guilt and anger about all that, and I didn't even get the worst of it.
guess I'm jealous on that account! I got the guilt and the shame without the kiss!
I'm wondering if an automatic "suspension" is something that NTM could implement when someone is accused of child abuse. There needs to be a fair and balanced investigation, everyone is innocent until proven guilty, yes yes, I fully support due process. However, this type of charge is an extreme case and something you'd want to address immediately, right? How about suspending the person immediately by isolating them, like a house arrest or something. Build a comfortable hole in the ground with a bench and a bucket, let the person stay in there until the investigation is completed. This would (a) make sure the investigation hurried along, and (b) get the slimeball in isolation. I'm being extreme here, but I'd think the concept of "suspension" might make some sense here.
[i]My husband works for a liberal, started by hippies, group home organization. The very first day that there is an abuse allegation, the employee is put on administrative leave. They ask you to not contact any other employees, to not go to work. Next they call you in for an interview. You still get paid, and retain benefits. They interview all concerned parties. Then, either by phone call, or coming back into the office--they give you their determination. [/]
It's clear-cut. It's not a perfect system. But we are mostly confident that when an employee is found to be abusive, they will be fired.
And during the process, they can do no further harm.
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