Dear Editor:
The reason I am writing is I have a question for the parents of the children, teenagers and older children. Do you know what your children are doing while you are at work and your children are either in school or playing hooky and not going to school and hanging out on street corners? They are making fun of adults in the area. And what do you think the parents would say if there Dick or Jane was making fun of an adult by calling her “hey bitch.” This type of behavior has to stop and the schools have to give these children and teenagers a ton of homework so this will keep the child indoors and not hanging out with the wrong kind of people.
I am getting tired of West New York Police not getting after these bad teenagers and bad younger children. You can’t walk past a high school without a teenager making fun of you . As for myself I use an electric wheelchair and I sometimes go past Memorial High School and these teenagers say hey look at that huge fat guy in a jazzy boy is he huge. And a lot of the time I feel like getting out of the chair and grabbing one of those teenagers and hold him until the police come and press charges and then take him to court so I can meet his parents and say did you teach your child to make fun of a handicap person in a wheelchair. Me and my friend can’t walk near any West New York Pubic School without a rude commit being made by a child or teenager by the public schools here in West New York. Sometimes you hear a parent making fun of you and then you understand where the child gets the idea that making fun of an adult is all right. So the the new year parents I think you should teach your child some manners about respecting an adult or an adult in a wheelchair because if I hear another teenager or a child make a rude remark towards myself or my friend I am going to sue the West New York Board of Education for allowing there school children when there at lunch to make fun of an adult. Now I have this question for all parents you should teach your child some manners about how to respect the adults in and around West New York.
Brian Silvani