• 9-year-old reporter breaks crime news before adult reporters
    35 replies, posted
The video itself: [media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ShfNQOUeAY&ab_channel=OrangeStreetNews[/media]
[QUOTE=Mr. Someguy;50088057] No but Facepunch is.[/QUOTE] literally one guy said 'I'm not sure how I feel about that' and everyone else said 'aaaah it's fine.' Who was overreacting
[QUOTE=13illay;50087374]as great as it is to see a 9 year old so actively and enthusiastically pursuing a career, i think it's a little bit unsettling to see her so specifically enthusiastic about crimes and hanging around a fucking murder crime scene working in the field of Journalism can desensitize people, especially when dealing with crime. i think it could be a little dangerous for a 9 year old's development.[/QUOTE] My dad is a photojournalist, and nearly every week he's seen some real messed up stuff. But its all part of work, he says
[QUOTE=space1;50092824]i think the exact opposite, in that, if you shield children from all the bad stuff in this world they'll be unable to handle it at all once they've grown up.[/QUOTE] Or maybe people will cross that bridge when they come to it, and exposure to traumatizing events generally make people much less able to handle things when they're grown up, anyway?
she crossed that bridge when she came to it though.
[QUOTE=Mingebox;50108814]Or maybe people will cross that bridge when they come to it, and exposure to traumatizing events generally make people much less able to handle things when they're grown up, anyway?[/QUOTE] Maybe if you do bad things to a child, that can lead to serious developmental disorders, but just witnessing bad and traumatic things once or twice will not screw them up. When my mom told me the truth about our dog being put down, I felt pretty bad, but I can see that it made it a lot easier for me to deal with loss later on in life. (I was less than 8 years old at the time)
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