Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Who Watching These Kids?

It's a vicious cycle of abuse and you wonder who is watching these children that eventually will play the role of parent to thier own children some day.

Recently visiting my brother at his ghetto apartment complex which has been robbed and had several break-ins, Sun Park Apartments in San Antonio, TX; I was surprised to see so many unsupervised children roaming freely within the complex. Should a pedophile or criminal want to prey on these unsuspecting children another sad statistic they would become.

Where is the accountability to being a good parent? So often we blame everyone else but the source of endangering that child. It takes a village/community to raise a child and when you have closed doors, see no evil, hear no evil turning the suspecting eye away as a neighbor these children are left without any protection.

Thank God my parents warned me of perverts and had that talk with me at a young age, because so often naive children are tricked into believing they can trust that very person that will eventually cause harm to them. You can get anything you want, its all in the way you ask for it. Its a sad world, but even sadder when there is no where to go for protection.

Take a look around you, the children are the future. What environment will they create when it's their time to shine?

Just released to the Associated Press, written by Lara Jakes Jordan

345 people have been arrested and 21 children rescued in what the FBI is calling a five-day roundup of networks of pimps who force children into prostitution.
The Justice Department says it targeted 16 cities as part of its "Operation Cross Country" that caps off five years of similar stings nationwide.
Many of the children forced into prostitution are either runaways or what authorities call "thrown-aways" — kids whose families have shunned them. Officials say they are preyed upon by organized networks of pimps who lure them in with shelter or drugs, then often beat, starve or otherwise abuse them until the children agree to work the streets.
"We together have no higher calling than to protect our children and to safeguard their innocence," FBI Director Robert Mueller said Wednesday. "Yet the sex trafficking of children remains one of the most violent and unforgivable crimes in this country."
In all, authorities arrested 345 people — including 290 adult prostitutes — during the operation that ended this week. Since 2003, 308 pimps and hookers have been convicted in state and federal courts of forcing youngsters into prostitution, and 433 child victims have been rescued, Mueller said.
The cities targeted in this week's sting are: Atlanta; Boston; Dallas; Detroit; Houston; Las Vegas; Los Angeles; Miami; Montgomery County, Md.; Oakland, Calif.; Phoenix; Reno, Nev.; Sacramento, Calif.; Tampa; Toledo, Ohio and Washington.
The problem of child prostitution has taken on a new urgency in recent years with the growth of online networks where pimps advertise the youngsters to clients. The FBI generally investigates child prostitution cases that cross state lines.
The cases aren't easy to convict.
In April 2006, for example, charges against a Nevada man resulted in a hung jury after his 14-year-old victim refused to testify against him. Months later, however, a second jury found Juan Rico Doss of Reno, Nev., guilty of forcing two girls — ages 14 and 16 — to sell sex in Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Francisco and Oakland.
A University of Pennsylvania study estimates nearly 300,000 children in the United States are at risk of being sexually exploited for commercial uses — "most of them runaways or thrown-aways," said Ernie Allen, president of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
"These kids are victims. This is 21st century slavery," Allen said. "They lack the ability to walk away."

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