lisa.shaffergill wrote:Jim,
There is frequently talk on this board about norming our city. Teaching people new to it acceptable behavior in terms of being neighborly.
You, and lots of us, ask teens in the park and around the city to tame the language. We talk to our neighbors about noise levels before we call the police, pick up trash that is not our own, and look out for other kids on our street. In my mind, talking to the lemonade stand girl falls into the same category. Particularly if her behavior causes you concern about our city. Did you talk to her, or just snap and post her photo?
Thank you Lisa for asking what was on my mind as I read this thread with my mouth open. I can't believe we are talking about potential homeowners not buying here or laws being broken when not one person even asked this girl to move. I am guessing she had no idea she was breaking any laws when she sat there trying to make some money! I can't believe either that this is where the fear is in "where Lakewood is going"! For God's sake there are two white pedophiles that work or have worked recently at the Dairy Mart on Madison in view of Roosevelt and we are going to worry about one girl who set up on a main street that NO ONE asked her to move from?
This is so bizzare. My first week of vacation was visiting my parents in Suffolk Va. They built a house in a new beautiful community on the water there. My dad walked me around the block showing me the houses, one each grander than the other. While his house looks like a mansion to me, his neighbor's house is twice as big. He owns a health care company and is African American. The house even bigger across the block is owned by two gay men. I was really impressed to see the diversity and acceptance there and it was a bit shocking because there seems to be such a division here or perceived line and so many stereotypes.
For the record Jim I didn't read any comments that pointed to the picture being racism but to some obvious comments. And I was shocked to see you perceive this as the beginning to the end of Lakewood as we know it, because that doesn't sound like you at all.
Dave,
I am sorry you feel that Lakewood is not the right place to raise your children. After all the beautiful places I visited these past two weeks, I was ready to come home to my old home and neighbors in Lakewood, and so were all three of my children. I love raising my children here, after moving around every few years of my childhood. I love the diversity and am thrilled my kids will be starting in one of the new beautiful schools. I love the teachers here, the library programs, the shops, the fact that all kids can fit in regardless of income or designer clothes. And I do believe we can all work together to keep it safe and thriving.
But not by worrying and focusing on the girl in this picture.
"Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries. Without them humanity cannot survive" Dalai Lama