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In reply to the discussion: Halloween when you were a kid: fun, not fun, never did it, etc ? [View all]jberryhill
(62,444 posts)26. The complete idiocy of the "razor blade in candy" nonsense...
...is mind boggling.
Think about it.
If you wanted to harm children, there are so many better ways to do that than by using a mechanism that is, literally, traceable to your front door.
You could put harmful things in food IN THE SUPERMARKET or convenience store or wherever, and achieve the same result without the risk of being on a very limited number of suspects that a small child actually visits on a Halloween evening outing.
Heres a mind bending concept. Teach your kids not to eat packaged products if the package appears to have been compromised. Yeah, sure, some psycho is going to meticulously ensure that the tampered snickers wrapper is carefully resealed and, again, hand it out from the front door of his residence.
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It defintely is a "thing"--just not during the time period of the OP (nor even several years later)
hlthe2b
Oct 2019
#8
yes I never heard of it when I was a child, and only starting maybe in the 1980's ? nt
steve2470
Oct 2019
#9
Speaking for myself, it seemed to be one of those over-produced TV scare stories.
demmiblue
Oct 2019
#13
In your wildest imagination, can you envision hundreds of parents, lining up outside the E.R.,
3Hotdogs
Oct 2019
#30
Loved it! Always made our own costumes and makeup. Also remember collecting pennies for unicef
Floyd R. Turbo
Oct 2019
#4
Not sure if they still do it. Certainly not in my area. I do recall a few years ago reading letters
Floyd R. Turbo
Oct 2019
#14
As kids we did black face for trick or treat. That was in the 50's. So much of what we did was
wasupaloopa
Oct 2019
#16
I always thought it was fun, but I remember one year when it was very cold, my parents made me
smirkymonkey
Oct 2019
#55
Loved it! I started about 1957. We went in a small group of just kids. What a great way to have
dameatball
Oct 2019
#21
We always had the day after Halloween out of school - so we did it up big time
rurallib
Oct 2019
#23
My friend and I used to go to the rich neighborhood where they gave out the full sized candy bars
ProudLib72
Oct 2019
#24
In our town, it started with the costume parade assembly at the elementary school.
3Hotdogs
Oct 2019
#32
My siblings and I always found things to make our own costumes and marched in the parade and ran all
appleannie1
Oct 2019
#40
Oh yes, I'm 67 and Fundamentalists hadn't turned against Haloween when I was a kid.
lark
Oct 2019
#41
when my late mom was a litle girl( great depression era 1.0) she would listen to spookey shows on
AllaN01Bear
Oct 2019
#49
1960's - Lame, uncomfortable, store-bought costumes, mostly crappy candy, cold weather.
ThoughtCriminal
Oct 2019
#56
A family from Poland moved in across the street a week or two before Halloween
world wide wally
Oct 2019
#57