Redshirting August boy?

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Yeah, that is the crazy anti-redshirter who always floods these threads. Nutty sad person.


She has no kids. Has admitted it before. I think I recall something about a co-worker having issues with their kid. But all of this is just a bunch of nonsense from someone with zero skin in the game.


Oh right, I forgot about that. Yes there was that insane coworker post. I remember that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Np-And you are name calling children.


Oh stop sock puppeting. For heavens sake, literally nothing in that post was name-calling. Please at least attempt rationality?


Children are called snowflakes as a term of endearment? You are vile and not rational.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.


And I didn’t mock any child. So you are wrong to say I did.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


Wow.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Yeah, that is the crazy anti-redshirter who always floods these threads. Nutty sad person.


She has no kids. Has admitted it before. I think I recall something about a co-worker having issues with their kid. But all of this is just a bunch of nonsense from someone with zero skin in the game.


Oh right, I forgot about that. Yes there was that insane coworker post. I remember that.


Answering yourself now.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.


And I didn’t mock any child. So you are wrong to say I did.


It was a question, wasn't it? If that wasn't you fine. But someone is being very hateful to kids calling them "slow" which is beyond disgusting. I wouldn't want to be on the side of people who use such foul language to talk about innocent kids.
Anonymous
Nice of posters who call people slow and children snowflakes. Way to keep it classy red-shirters.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.


And I didn’t mock any child. So you are wrong to say I did.


It was a question, wasn't it? If that wasn't you fine. But someone is being very hateful to kids calling them "slow" which is beyond disgusting. I wouldn't want to be on the side of people who use such foul language to talk about innocent kids.


Yes, the one who called someone that was called out by me and others tried to justify it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Nice of posters who call people slow and children snowflakes. Way to keep it classy red-shirters.


I called YOU slow… not children. Get your facts straight
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.


And I didn’t mock any child. So you are wrong to say I did.


It was a question, wasn't it? If that wasn't you fine. But someone is being very hateful to kids calling them "slow" which is beyond disgusting. I wouldn't want to be on the side of people who use such foul language to talk about innocent kids.


Like the one who says redshirting is okay while calling a child a snowflake.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Nice of posters who call people slow and children snowflakes. Way to keep it classy red-shirters.


I called YOU slow… not children. Get your facts straight


And that is okay? It is highly inappropriate and you are an embarrassment.
Doubt you have any Ivy League education or you’re just a amoral person.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.


And I didn’t mock any child. So you are wrong to say I did.


It was a question, wasn't it? If that wasn't you fine. But someone is being very hateful to kids calling them "slow" which is beyond disgusting. I wouldn't want to be on the side of people who use such foul language to talk about innocent kids.


Like the one who says redshirting is okay while calling a child a snowflake.


It's all wrong. But still not seeing evidence or proof that other kids are being harmed if some kids start late. Surely there must be some evidence somewhere?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Nice of posters who call people slow and children snowflakes. Way to keep it classy red-shirters.


I called YOU slow… not children. Get your facts straight


DP
And that is supposed to help you? You need to get off dcum and do some soul searching.
That is pathetic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The thing that really gets to me are the parents who come on here and post, "Why do you care if I redshirt my kid?! What does it matter to you if I didn't want him to be the youngest?" It matters to me because holding back normally developing summer birthday kids puts non-redshirted kids at a disadvantage. Now, instead of being one year younger than the older peers, they are sometimes 15 months younger than the others. Redshirting skews the age, abilities, maturity, and social capacities of a class. I wish schools would set a cut off and hold to it.


It literally does not matter, speaking as a parent who didn’t redshirt and has kids in their older teens now. If you think it matters, you have lead, so far, a pretty narrow and restricted life. Of all the things my kids have encountered in their lives, other kids redshirting is never, ever on the list of even mildly problematic things they’ve encountered. I’d honestly be pretty stressed out as a parent if they told me the redshirting of other kids bothered them, because it would show my kids lacked a healthy sense of perspective and reality. (Fortunately my kids would never do that.)

Also, you have plenty of options with private school: just go to a private school that does not redshirt. There are some schools that don’t redshirt very often if at all. I don’t understand why that concept is so hard to grasp, but with private schools you have options.


You are incredibly naive with a sense of entitlement.


I think actually you are the one who is incredibly naive and entitled, given how upset you are about something like redshirting. You’ve clearly never encountered any real problems in school. You spend all your mental energy on this and not on the kids who go to school hungry, who are years behind grade level, the drugs in schools, the vaping, the violence. I’ve worked with, tried to solve, and seen all of this. But you? You are worried your precious little snowflake might encounter a kid ten months older than her rather than nine months older than her. Yeah, you are the naive and entitled one here.


Only served to show how naive and entitled you are.


You don't even have kids, do you?


Uh, yes I do. You don’t have a moral compass, do you?


You mock children, yes? You wouldn't know anything about a moral compass.


Says the one who called a child a snowflake.


I did no such think. There are multiple posters here.


And I didn’t mock any child. So you are wrong to say I did.


It was a question, wasn't it? If that wasn't you fine. But someone is being very hateful to kids calling them "slow" which is beyond disgusting. I wouldn't want to be on the side of people who use such foul language to talk about innocent kids.


Like the one who says redshirting is okay while calling a child a snowflake.


It's all wrong. But still not seeing evidence or proof that other kids are being harmed if some kids start late. Surely there must be some evidence somewhere?


Let’s insult kids, but first I want evidence of starting kids late.
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