Anonymous wrote:I dunno. I just came in from outside. A dad was walking his two kids home from somewhere. The 4 or 5 year old hit the corner to our street and shrieked "Daddy, there's a SANTA on the chimney! See the SANTA!" He started jumping up and down, he was soooooooo excited. And I looked up. Sure enough my neighbor had an inflatable Santa up on his room trying to stuff himself down the chimney. I don't know if inflatables are tacky or not but hearing the excitement in that little boy's voice certainly made me smile!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't people do what makes them and their children happy? Without being subjected to your snobby judgement.
You are entitled to your trashy inflatables, and I am entitled to my judgement of your trashy inflatables. We both win.
And I’m entitled to judge you for being a petty jerk.
Yep, you certainly are. Only difference is I am not at all triggered by your judgement of me, but you are triggered by my judgement of you, lol![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't people do what makes them and their children happy? Without being subjected to your snobby judgement.
You are entitled to your trashy inflatables, and I am entitled to my judgement of your trashy inflatables. We both win.
And I’m entitled to judge you for being a petty jerk.
Anonymous wrote:They don't make me happy. They remind me of all the junk people buy at the holidays and how much of it winds up in landfills and also how much oil and fuel gets used up shipping it to people's homes so they can do this stuff. I get some people use them year after year, but some people don't, and also it becomes another thing that people compete over so what starts as one house with a few tacky inflatables because entire neighborhoods full of them. Yes it is bad for the environment.
Also, there are lots of ways to make kids smile. You can hug them! Bake some cookies! Say you love them! You really do not have to buy a generator and a $100 piece of tacky plastic on Amazon to make your child smile during the holiday season.
Sorry to be a killjoy. I love holidays and celebrating with family and friends and enjoying food and I even like plenty of decorations, just not the plastic crap ones, and the yard inflatables are sort of the poster child for "plastic Christmas crap." I'm not a grinch but I can't get behind these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't people do what makes them and their children happy? Without being subjected to your snobby judgement.
You are entitled to your trashy inflatables, and I am entitled to my judgement of your trashy inflatables. We both win.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't people do what makes them and their children happy? Without being subjected to your snobby judgement.
Anonymous wrote:I appreciate the people decorate differently. I think inflatables are tack....hold on....my lighted Costco reindeer just fell over.
Anonymous wrote:They don't make me happy. They remind me of all the junk people buy at the holidays and how much of it winds up in landfills and also how much oil and fuel gets used up shipping it to people's homes so they can do this stuff. I get some people use them year after year, but some people don't, and also it becomes another thing that people compete over so what starts as one house with a few tacky inflatables because entire neighborhoods full of them. Yes it is bad for the environment.
Also, there are lots of ways to make kids smile. You can hug them! Bake some cookies! Say you love them! You really do not have to buy a generator and a $100 piece of tacky plastic on Amazon to make your child smile during the holiday season.
Sorry to be a killjoy. I love holidays and celebrating with family and friends and enjoying food and I even like plenty of decorations, just not the plastic crap ones, and the yard inflatables are sort of the poster child for "plastic Christmas crap." I'm not a grinch but I can't get behind these.