Thanks for a rational post on this topic. It's madness to suggest half-a-million kids are literally disappearing every year.
So let's consider California as an example. US population = 330M. California population = 40M. 40/330 = 12%. So CA has 12% of the US population. 12% of 460,000 missing kids = 55,000. Two biggest population centers in CA are LA and SF bay area. If 25,000 kids went missing EVERY YEAR, in SF or LA, could that go unnoticed? What happens to them? Where are they kept?
Why would 15-16 year olds be any different? They still attend school, they still have parents, and their absence/disappearance would be noticed. Think about it - 3 kids disappearing per school, per year .... (130,000 K-12 schools in the US; 460,000 kids = 3 per school on average).
Thanks for a rational post on this topic. It's madness to suggest half-a-million kids are literally disappearing every year.
So let's consider California as an example. US population = 330M. California population = 40M. 40/330 = 12%. So CA has 12% of the US population. 12% of 460,000 missing kids = 55,000. Two biggest population centers in CA are LA and SF bay area. If 25,000 kids went missing EVERY YEAR, in SF or LA, could that go unnoticed? What happens to them? Where are they kept?
What if they are 15-16 and "run away" from home?
Why would 15-16 year olds be any different? They still attend school, they still have parents, and their absence/disappearance would be noticed. Think about it - 3 kids disappearing per school, per year .... (130,000 K-12 schools in the US; 460,000 kids = 3 per school on average).
Thought about it, yeah, you're right.
There appear to be many trying to sow disinfo to discredit us.