So many disgusting posters

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Snow days off work/school = bored and maladjusted people looking for something to make them feel alive.

...and i notice upticks in malevolence when there is no school. It feels like there are some 13 year olds with bad attitudes and an internet connection sock puppeting some of these threads.


I think some private schools opening while MCPS stayed closed also brought some folks over to this forum, upset and wanting to stir things up.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I grew up near Chappaqua and my high school best friend went to public school there. All I remember him talking about was how everyone had heated driveways and I thought that was so cool. Now in adulthood you couldn’t pay me to live there.


PP here.

Me either.

When we moved to the DC area, we were driving through Potomac and it reminded me so much of Chappaqua that I told my husband there was no way I could live there.

And yet these Potomac/Bethesda public school parents think they’re so much more righteous and less stuck-up than private school parents. It’s hilarious.


+1 The Bethesda and Chevy Chase public school families that I know live far more lavish lifestyles (multiple vacations, luxury cars, massive houses, etc) than the Bethesda/Chevy Chase Catholic school families I know. The Catholic school families divert a significant chunk of their disposable income to their kids’ tuition. The public school families use that money for material goods.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I don’t really care about or notice other peoples weight, but it was so strange to me how most of the mothers at my kid’s private school were thin and their daughters were not.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I don’t really care about or notice other peoples weight, but it was so strange to me how most of the mothers at my kid’s private school were thin and their daughters were not.


PP here. I haven’t seen that, but to the people arguing about the supposed moral superiority of public school parents, I give you a quote from a mom in my Chappaqua neighborhood:

How was our summer? Well, Victoria gained 5 pounds but thank god she lost it again.

This was at the bus stop. In front of her 4th grade daughter, who was thin.
Anonymous
Some people enjoy stirring the pot, including me.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I grew up near Chappaqua and my high school best friend went to public school there. All I remember him talking about was how everyone had heated driveways and I thought that was so cool. Now in adulthood you couldn’t pay me to live there.


PP here.

Me either.

When we moved to the DC area, we were driving through Potomac and it reminded me so much of Chappaqua that I told my husband there was no way I could live there.

And yet these Potomac/Bethesda public school parents think they’re so much more righteous and less stuck-up than private school parents. It’s hilarious.


+1 The Bethesda and Chevy Chase public school families that I know live far more lavish lifestyles (multiple vacations, luxury cars, massive houses, etc) than the Bethesda/Chevy Chase Catholic school families I know. The Catholic school families divert a significant chunk of their disposable income to their kids’ tuition. The public school families use that money for material goods.


But what is wrong with that?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I don’t really care about or notice other peoples weight, but it was so strange to me how most of the mothers at my kid’s private school were thin and their daughters were not.


Weightless Drug?
Anonymous
I am a hghs grad from 99. When did you graduate?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I don’t really care about or notice other peoples weight, but it was so strange to me how most of the mothers at my kid’s private school were thin and their daughters were not.


Weightless Drug?


I’ve noticed it for years though. Long before everyone started using glps.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have kids in both private and public and the public school parents are just as wealthy if not more but less into focusing on vapid status.


LOL

— someone who went to Chappaqua public schools and watched as kids got Range Rovers for their 16th birthdays and heard moms talk openly about their daughters needing to lose weight


I grew up near Chappaqua and my high school best friend went to public school there. All I remember him talking about was how everyone had heated driveways and I thought that was so cool. Now in adulthood you couldn’t pay me to live there.


PP here.

Me either.

When we moved to the DC area, we were driving through Potomac and it reminded me so much of Chappaqua that I told my husband there was no way I could live there.

And yet these Potomac/Bethesda public school parents think they’re so much more righteous and less stuck-up than private school parents. It’s hilarious.


+1 The Bethesda and Chevy Chase public school families that I know live far more lavish lifestyles (multiple vacations, luxury cars, massive houses, etc) than the Bethesda/Chevy Chase Catholic school families I know. The Catholic school families divert a significant chunk of their disposable income to their kids’ tuition. The public school families use that money for material goods.




They sound like awful parents.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I am a hghs grad from 99. When did you graduate?


I would’ve been class of 2005 but I ended up going to boarding school.

I went to roaring brook and bell though!
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