ANSWERS: 24
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Run out and snatch the child up to safety, of course.
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I would stop my car and go get that poor child and rush him to the hospital.
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Call 911
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I would wonder if someone slipped me some LSD in my coffee.
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Stop the car, call the police or some help center, and take the child to the police station or hospital. Maybe buying some clothes for him/her afterward.
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Block traffic until I could get the child to safety, then call 911 on my way to the nearest medical facility.
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I'd call the cops and then go out the intersection. Pick the kid up and get them out of traffic, then I'd check for injuries, and then call my old boss, who's a department manager for CPS. Wait for someone to show up.
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I would keep on driving...not my bussiness.
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Pick up the child, try to get an idea of where his/her "home" is, go to that home, and see where in the WORLD the parents are, and whether or not they even noticed their child was missing. If the parents don't seem to be good parents, or the child doesn't have a "home", I would start the adoption process. No child should go through that.
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The only logical thing, get the kid out of the street and make sure the child is okay. Next find the parents and precede to call 911 and CPS
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I'd block the lane with my car with it's hazard lights on. Call 911. Take off my shirt or jacket and cover them. Crouch down and comfort the child until help arrived. I would not move them because a broken neck or spinal injury that I am unaware of could cripple them if I did.
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To be perfectly honest I don't know.I'd feel bad if I didn't help however would be very nervous to help. I would probably do the cowardly thing and phone my parents see if they could help.
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Anything I could to help them!
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Stop the traffic and help them, i have done this for a dog, why wouldn't people help a human??
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Try my best to get over to the child as quick as I could. I wouldn't mind the traffic.
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It is interesting that everybody on this thread says how they would step in and rescue the child. But when something like this actually happens, people tend to just walk past. I see from your original question that no one seemed to care, so I take it from this that it really did happen and people walked past as usual.
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I would be getting to the child as quickly as I could, covering it with anything on hand, and calling police.
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Cover the child with something warm, offer reassurance, phone for an ambulance, i wouldnt move the child in case of injury
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Is this a real story?
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Look around for Ashton as I ran over to help
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get him out of there and call the police
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You put on your emergency blinkers, park near the child in a manner to protect it from other traffic as best you can, then get out, pick up the child, carry it out of traffic, and call the police. I had a similar situation driving when I saw an older woman in a wheelchair accidently go off the curb. The woman and the wheelchair ended up sprawled out in a traffic lane on a boulevard in very heavy traffic. What I suggested for the kid I did for her. She was freaked out but OK and went on her way as soon as I got her back in her chair on the sidewalk.
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i would get them off the the street and then tell the police about it
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I'd get them out of danger and I wouldn't leave that child's side until they were safe!
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