No in DC we were ordered to stay in our residences with narrow exceptions. I won’t even address your assertion about schools, which nobody agrees with, not even the teachers unions. Everyone acknowledges virtual was a massive failure even if they justify it as necessary for health. |
Do you work away from home? I'd rather kids in-person than be victim to statistical anomalies. People die. In fact, 100% of people die. |
Yes … so opposition to (checks note) want kids to be in school. I’m not sure what “safety measures” you’re talking about but in DC these always seemed to be a moving target. Remember that the reopening was post-vaccine in DC. The safety measures like small class size, quarantine for exposure, masks, etc, were quite disruptive for a whole year + and a big waste of money (eg testing after returning from Christmas). Stupid sh*t like making the kids hold pool noodles on the playground so they would distance properly outside. (Then once the kids of course started bashing each other with the pool noodles, they were banned.) That said, I am grateful that our school was more reasonable (lazy?) than some and never tried to do outdoor lunch or make kids eat silently or nonsense like that. The massive silver lining of Omicron is that it ripped off the bandaid. Kids stayed in school in DC even as everyone got covid. Our school had 5-6 cases/week for a while but stayed open with minimal disruption. It was fine! I was shocked but happy when DCPS went mask optional in March. Looking back, the amount of effort expended *post vaccine* for “safety measures” seems quite absurd and I do not think it will be repeated. |
Yep, I guess the silver lining to my kids being subjected to this nonsense is that it won't happen to the future generation. |
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It would be great to have a non-partisan assessment of what worked and what didn’t work. Everything is so politicized and polarized it is ridiculous.
I think one important lesson is that schools stayed closed far too long, and we are paying a heavy price for that. |
The kids paid a heavy price, and their parents. The people who made these decisions aren't paying anything and will never be held accountable. |
| There should be Nuremberg type trials for this whole debacle. I will never forget what they did. |
That’s what I’ll say to you the next time someone you love does. |
You keep forgetting to mention the teachers who might have refused to go to work or quit if they had been forced back. Who was going to do the teaching? Why do you expect people to sacrifice for you? |
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I still have no clue why all the playgrounds got fenced off and closed. WHY?!
We tried very hard to keep things normal for our small kids, but as parents we paid a heavy price. I changed a lot as a parent and also as a person. I had a great life beforehand filled with friends and relatives. It made me realize that you can't rely on anyone. Grandparents just huddled in their houses by themselves while kids had mental breakdown and parents nearly lost their jobs. |
So much irrational hate. |
Thanks, Trump. You had one job. Be like Bush after 9/11. |
Who produced food for you? Who delivered those groceries, that take-out? Who provided your utilities, your internet, your water? Who policed your community? Who maintained the roads and infrastructure? Who worked the airports and transportation to keep goods moving? Why do you expect any of the people to have sacrificed for you? |
Are you the one saying "oh well! Must have been mentally weak" about the Covid suicides? Because yeah, that's what you're doing. |
We aren’t paying a “heavy” price for it. The kids will be fine. It’s not like that was some unique or unprecedented phenomenon. Children in war zones go without schooling for years. They experience actual trauma and turn out fine. These overly anxious mommies going all Karen mad in school boards years after the fact whinging about “learning loss” really need to check themselves. |