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Political Correctness has gone too far
http://www.citynews.ca/news/news_24317.aspx
There's political correctness and then there's what happened in a school in a place called Lund, Sweden last week. And it just might make you wonder how far is too far. School officials have confiscated the party invitations an 8-year-old boy was handing out to his classmates. Why would they do such a thing? The reason is that he failed to invite two of the kids in his class, and authorities there claim there are specific rules against discrimination that they're not allowed to break. So they ordered the lad to stop doling them out on campus. The youngster's father is outraged by the red tape, explaining his son didn't include the pair because one bullied him and the other excluded him from his own recent birthday party. The mad dad has filed a complaint with local officials, complaining the school has taken things too far. "My son has taken it very hard," he told a local newspaper. "It's like taking someone's mail." The ombudsman's decision about what to do on the issue will be made before September 8th - although there's no word on whether that's before or after the kid's actual birthday |
haha. I agree. The world is trying to make everyone like each other, it's not possible. It just make poeople hate each other more. Maybe this is the GREAT plan.
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Your #1 freedom is freedom of choice... unless you exclude someone, then we choose for you.
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I can honestly see the day when a ugly girl sues and charges a guy with something all because he hit on a hot chick beside her and ignored her completely thereby hurting her feelings
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What a fucking joke.
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Terrible. Just FUBAR.
Public schools are just churning out the fucked up children and you are paying for it. Your tax dollars at work. When I was a little tyke, not everyone got valentines on valentines days. There were always some crying kid who got zero, while some popular kid got 30. Tough shit, welcome to life on the planet earth. |
Those Europeans..... You never know what's next with them!
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Congratuwelldone - you've just won a year's supply of FAIL Faithfully, The rest of the world xx |
I dunno how harsh I'd be on Swedish schools... When you consider that Maine has a school where they give girls as young as 11 birth control pills if she asks. Maine state law prevents them from informing parents as well. So yes indeed, your 11 year old baby in Maine, USA could be on the pill and you not know it. If she grows a beard, search her room lol.
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We have two rights in "democracies": 1) remain silent and 2) pay taxes. :1orglaugh:1orglaugh
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although I do think the parents should be at the very least informed about any medical decisions being made for their child :2 cents: ...on a side note, does anyone think home-schooling is going to be less popular in the coming years? |
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I totaly agree!
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Maine state law specifically prohibits them from telling the parents however. That'd be enough for me to move if I had a young child. Pretty simple. On home schooling, I think these sorts of insane school practices that we speak about are driving more and more people to home school. HOWEVER, laws are being passed in many states in the US now that declare you must have a teaching degree in order to home school. Most states already require quarterly and annual reports and testing results. And there's been no big story about how home schooled kids are failing. Besides which, if you home school, the public school still gets their taxes from you. Why do they want to make it harder to home school? |
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I live very close to that city and its sweden in a nutshell!
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Say if the whole community home school, then all the kids can interact. If given the choice my kids would be home schooled |
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I'm all for home schooling, providing the parents/tutors used know what they are on about and that certain subjects aren't censored for various reasons (i'm no big fan of Catholic schools either, before someone comes in to criticise), and that the children who are being homeschooled somehow get to make friends with others and interact with them in something akin to the same way they would in a state school (i.e. not just a scheduled 5 minute playtime per day). |
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As an example, I read an interview with several apparently successful, reasonably educated "Gen Y'rs" (I'm of the Generation X crowd) and the subject of Thomas Jefferson came up. For those of you outside the USA, this is one of the "founding fathers" of our country, and has always been portrayed (to the best of my knowledge) as one of the most important historical figures for the last 200+ years. Compare him to, for instance, an early King or founder of your country, in order to understand his relevance to our country. If you asked someone from my generation about Thomas Jefferson, you'd get varying replies about the American Revolution, our Declaration of Independence, his philosophy of law that shaped our government, and other matters of substance. The Gen Y'rs they interviewed, mentioned that he was "some guy who had illegitimate children with slaves". Now I don't know if they got this slant on a historical figure from TMZ(etc) or from school, but it sure didn't seem like they picked up much knowledge about the man's accomplishments via traditional educational methods, if that was all they had to say about him. Other people I've spoken with who do have kids in school, have confirmed to me that they seem to be teaching less and less about our own history. Ask yourself, what purpose does it serve to create generation(s) of people without a firm grasp of how our country came to be, and why our government functions in the manner that it does? Why is not only ignorance of these matters being pushed in our supposed "educational system", but at the same time they seek to chip away at what can only be described as American heroes? What purpose does it serve to discredit our heroes in such a manner? It seems to me that through either willful ignorance or some manner of plan, those responsible for educating the next generation are trying to put their own slant on our country's history and traditions, and that to me is very disturbing :2 cents: |
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Of course you are right in that people remember for all of their lives the trauma's, trials and tribulations of their school years. Shit I could type a book about my own memories of kindegarten through high school, and not one of those memories involves a formula or date in history. And they're not exactly what ya might call "fond" memories either, lol. edit: also, of course there is no direct evidence that a home schooled child has "less" or "worse" social interaction. The only thing one could say the evidence shows is they dont have a "public school" social interaction because it's self evident. |
You really shouldn't stop kids choosing who to play with
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There are schools right here in the US where kids aren't allowed to pass out invitations for anything at school unless the whole class is invited so this isn't strictly a European thing.
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"The youngster's father is outraged by the red tape, explaining his son didn't include the pair because one bullied him and the other excluded him from his own recent birthday party. "
bahahahaha |
I think you're all just mad that you weren't invited.
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When I was in school I would have been one of those 2 kids
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