Anonymous wrote:
Don't you think apathy and ignorance is more dangerous than engagement and knowledge of issues?
When voters don't pay attention, they regret it.
I hope you can find your way to see this, and accept that you are living where people will be vocal, and mostly vocal for the moderate left.
And don't imagine that any current influential politician is a radical socialist or far-left ideologue. As a European, I can attest that your entire political body is shifted to the right compared to European nations'. Most democrats here would be considered centrist over there. There are actually respected Socialist and Communist parties in many European countries. Here both those words are swear words, for some reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our principal holds a get together in the spring for incoming parents of K students. At this event, in response to an at best tangentially related question, she stated that she would never go to an MD beach to spite the current R governor. (The governor mandated that schools start after Labor Day in large part to help businesses at the MD beaches.)
Regardless of what you think of starting school later, or the governor more broadly, it is crazy that she would make such a sharp political jab at a welcoming event. Either she didn't care, or she just assumed every would agree with her, neither of which is really ok.
She's probably angry because the Gov put beach business over student welfare. This condensed calendar is not in the best academic interest of students. Maybe the way it came out wasn't the most appropriate, but I don't know that I'd call that political. Her ability to help students learn and retain info is directly affected by Hogan's (& Franchot's -- a Dem) policy.
Anonymous wrote:Our principal holds a get together in the spring for incoming parents of K students. At this event, in response to an at best tangentially related question, she stated that she would never go to an MD beach to spite the current R governor. (The governor mandated that schools start after Labor Day in large part to help businesses at the MD beaches.)
Regardless of what you think of starting school later, or the governor more broadly, it is crazy that she would make such a sharp political jab at a welcoming event. Either she didn't care, or she just assumed every would agree with her, neither of which is really ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our principal holds a get together in the spring for incoming parents of K students. At this event, in response to an at best tangentially related question, she stated that she would never go to an MD beach to spite the current R governor. (The governor mandated that schools start after Labor Day in large part to help businesses at the MD beaches.)
Regardless of what you think of starting school later, or the governor more broadly, it is crazy that she would make such a sharp political jab at a welcoming event. Either she didn't care, or she just assumed every would agree with her, neither of which is really ok.
She's probably angry because the Gov put beach business over student welfare. This condensed calendar is not in the best academic interest of students. Maybe the way it came out wasn't the most appropriate, but I don't know that I'd call that political. Her ability to help students learn and retain info is directly affected by Hogan's (& Franchot's -- a Dem) policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You moved to the DC suburbs - politics is front and center all year long. Yes, people are generally friendly and helpful in their various communities, and they also often have strongly held and relatively well informed political opinions. It really depends what you mean by “radical.” If you think Nancy Pelosi is “radical” then yes, you’ll find a lot of those radicals here. But not many anarchists or people who advocate violent revolution.
DC is not generally friendly or helpful. Come on now.
Anonymous wrote:You moved to the DC suburbs - politics is front and center all year long. Yes, people are generally friendly and helpful in their various communities, and they also often have strongly held and relatively well informed political opinions. It really depends what you mean by “radical.” If you think Nancy Pelosi is “radical” then yes, you’ll find a lot of those radicals here. But not many anarchists or people who advocate violent revolution.
Anonymous wrote:Our principal holds a get together in the spring for incoming parents of K students. At this event, in response to an at best tangentially related question, she stated that she would never go to an MD beach to spite the current R governor. (The governor mandated that schools start after Labor Day in large part to help businesses at the MD beaches.)
Regardless of what you think of starting school later, or the governor more broadly, it is crazy that she would make such a sharp political jab at a welcoming event. Either she didn't care, or she just assumed every would agree with her, neither of which is really ok.