Harmony stated:
15 year olds are tried in adult court all the time, when the crimes they commit are adult crimes. They are held personally accountable for their actions by courts of law. post referenceGenerally “15 year olds” brought before the law are in juvenile court. Hence an overstatement -- “all the time.” Only in the most heinous cases of crimes against persons or property are juveniles brought to trial as adults.
Harmony stated:
The parents are not on trial, nor are their parenting skills on trial. Depending upon the situation, parents/guardians are often targets of the law in the addressing of juvenile violation of law. Of course, if a trial for a crime charged to a juvenile is under way, the parent is not charged with a crime. His/her “parenting skills,” however may well be open to question.
Harmony stated:
Anyone who thinks parents don't make mistakes is an idiot. And anyone who thinks a 15 year old isn't capable of taking the responsibility for their own actions is both an enabler and an idiot. In 19th and early 20th century medicine and psychology, an "idiot" was a person with a very severe mental retardation. In the early 1900s, Dr. Henry H. Goddard proposed a classification system for mental retardation based on the Binet-Simon concept of mental age. Individuals with the lowest mental age level (less than three years) were identified as idiots; imbiciles had a mental age of three to 7 years., and morons had a mental age of seven to ten years.[9] IQ, or intelligence quotient, is determined by dividing a person's mental age, as determined by standardized tests, by chronological age. The term "idiot" is sometimes used to refer to people having an IQ below 30.
source for word meaningThere is general agreement that minors (those under 18) have some “responsibility” for what they do. At the same time,
minors (those under 18 to 21) is one who is under the age at which he/she assumes adult responsibilities. Adult responsibilities differ from those of minors.
Parental responsibilities involve a host of obligations which apply to them in regard to those legally in their keeping.
Harmony stated:
I seriously doubt that GoodK is ever going to show some understanding of the other side of this story. He's going to say something along the lines of "I was smoking, that's why I got sent away", when in reality the truth may be closer to "I was smoking pot, binge drinking and then driving, and having unprotected sex with multiple partners and my parents were afraid I'd kill someone or get an STD, that's why I got sent away". Do we have evidence of all these things against GoodK? What is the source for this, harmony: “He's going to say something along the lines of…”?
Was GoodK on trial for an
adult crime in an
adult court? What is suggested, not established, in the above statement would not be grounds for a juvenile to be placed on trial as an adult. Even a parent who is fearful that a juvenile
might commit a crime of murder is not sufficient grounds for an arrest and trial in an adult court for that juvenile. The quotes in the statement are false unless you have access to a written, signed confession of GoodK. Absent these kinds of particulars, the comment is a speculation in the form of a personal attack on GoodK.
Harmony stated:
I'm not seeing a lot of GoodK taking the responsibility for his actions as a 15 year old. Seeing in speculation what is not there, not presented, and not established does not hold. In addition, speculating what GoodK might have thought or said is both legally and psychologically unsound.
Harmony stated:
He didn't exhibit that kind of behavior then (if he had, he wouldn't have gotten sent away from home), and he certainly doesn't exhibit it now. When he was “sent away from home,” that was a decision of a parent/guardian. It was not the decision of GoodK. The responsibility to send a minor to a place like West Ridge lies with those who exercised their control over a minor. While we have some statements from GoodK, we have not seen a rejoinder from any official representing West Ridge Academy specifically in regard to what GoodK has stated.
Harmony stated:
I spent too many years in the school system and the legal system to ever give a 15 year old a free pass. 15 years old is old enough to take the responsibility for everything they do, no matter what was the antecedents that led up to the behavior. Is a
year count here relevant to the information available? Parents who place a minor in a correctional facility are exercising a legal option and take responsibility. The focus on
15 as somehow a watershed is incorrect. Children grow from day to day and year to year. While the law sets arbitrary chronological age for
adult responsibility, the fact is that maturity and responsibility is incremental. There may be an event (a party, another social event, a private encounter, etc.) which offers a young person opportunity to meet a situation the best way he/she is equipped to meet it. Sometimes minors rise to extraordinary levels of maturity and responsibility. Sometimes
adults fail to do the same.
However, the notion that “15 years-old is old enough to take the responsibility for
everything they do” is a false assessment of both the law and of psychology. (The emphasis in the quote is for focus on the erroneous thinking.) Neither the law nor solid psychiatry would make such a claim.
For example: Parents are responsible who leave several 15 year-old youths home alone for hours where liquor is available, right there in the house. If neighbors summon the police and the police find no adult present and that no adult has been present for hours, the parents are responsible if the result is a group of drunk 15 year-olds. The
responsibility of the parents was not met in this example. It is the parents who will be charged with
child neglect or with
child endangerment.
Hence, it is incorrect to conclude that “15 years old is old enough to take the responsibility
for everything they do." There is a nuance missed here. The 15 year-olds have some responsibility. They should not have gotten drunk or been drinking alcohol at all. They were wrong. At the same time, the parents/guardians were wrong as well. They failed. They failed to recognize the potential danger of liquor and 15 year-olds in the same place at the same time with
no adult, responsible supervision.
Harmony stated:
If you give a 15 year old a free pass, believe everything he says, accept his world view as accurate and real, just because he is 15 years old then you are supporting a distorted view of reality. Your choice, of course. Not one I'd make, but then, I've worked with 15 year olds and with adults who made pretty poor choices from the time they were 15 year olds. Has the first been suggested by someone?
Consider the contradictory argument. On the one hand it is argued that “15 year old is old enough to take the responsibility
for everything they do. On the other had it is argued that one should not give “a 15 year old a free pass...” If the first argument stands, the second does not. In the second, we are asked not to trust a 15 year-old. In the first we are asked to consider that he/she has full responsibility.
Neither is correct. Responsibility develops over time and through situations calling for decision-making. A 12 year-old makes decisions. A 5 year-old makes decisions.
For example: A mother says to her 5 year-old who is getting ready for kindergarten, “What would you like to wear today – your red outfit or your green one? Whatever the 5 year-old chooses is
correct. The choice was reasonable for the age. It was
sound parenting. There are many situations in which smaller children and teenagers can and should be encouraged to make choices. Parents who engage in
sound parenting are much more likely to have successful maturing youth.
Choices given to young people change and become more serious as they mature and demonstrate their capacity to make sound choices. Those 15 should also be given decision-making options. But these options should be more consequential than those give to a child of 10.
The process of transfer of decision-making as children grow up is a gradual one.
The parent who says: “As long as you live in my house, you will do as I say, and when you’re out on your own you can make the decisions” –that parent makes a serious error of responsibility. When an infant learns to walk, he/she falls a lot. Sometimes he gets hurt. If parents are watching responsibly, the “hurt” won’t be life-threatening. But the child will fall and get up or be helped up. Parents put up child-gates at stairs to keep toddlers from falling to serious injury. That’s responsible parenting. But parents don’t put up child-gates for an 8 year-old (assuming the child is a normal healthy child without serious physical or mental handicaps).
There are many places for mistakes, failures, and poor judgment. They are inclusive. Even so, there are many opportunities for individuals and even institutions to make better judgments demonstrating capacity to give benefit.
JAK