Anonymous wrote:They taste awful. I'm not eating that crap just to please someone else, and I'm not wasting my money either.
Anonymous wrote:Personally I find door-to-door sales more “guilting” than an email or social media post that I can easily ignore.
Anonymous wrote:For the cookie snobs, guess what? Donating boxes of cookies that Girl Scouts will give to a local charity (Metropolitan USO around here) counts towards girls' goals the same as if you buy cookies for yourself. It's called Troop2Troops.
Anonymous wrote:What does it teach your child if most of their boxes are sold through your own social media push? Guilting colleagues and friends into buying multiple highly processed cookies that last only 6 months. What happened to door-to-door sales? Kudos to the parents who encourage old school ways of selling the cookies and don't post links and sales on their Facebook pages. "Look how many boxes Larla sold!" but it was really just her mother selling them to her friends!
Anonymous wrote:GS guides kids to make their own online advertisement and yes, it gets sent to parent friends. Just don’t respond. The GS donate tons of boxes. Each troop picks a group to which they donate. The military, firefighters, hospital ERs, whichever.
The troop earns money from the sales to fund their activities, which include many cool things that girls could not otherwise afford. GS also have related badges concerning business and being an entrepreneur that relate to cookie sales, all of which is valuable to kids. Many kids sell cookies to earn money for summer camp.
If you don’t want them, just say no, and move on. It’s a good organization that provides leadership opportunities for girls and civic education.
There are so many other things to whine about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend of mine in a large American city sends his kid to public school, but the PTA at that school (in a very rich neighborhood) does a huge amount of fundraising to where the quality of the school is close to private. Several times a year he posts on his FB aggressively about things like popcorn sales that his tween is supposedly doing to raise money for the school--last time it was for a very expensive trip. He will say his daughter needs to sell x amount more to be in "first place" or whatever, and the amount of popcorn sales was over 3k last time. Ridiculous.
I used to fall for this stuff so hard. Colleagues would be like "we're raising money for the public school" and I'd go ahead and give money/buy the popcorn/whatever because I do care about supporting public schools.
Then I actually had a kid and learned more about public schools in our city and realized I'd been giving a ton of money to all the rich schools in the city for a bunch of extras that mostly only helped wealthy kids whose parents could afford those extras anyway. I felt like a chump.
Now I actually pay attention. I contribute when it's a title one school with a high at risk population, or if the fundraiser is going directly to fund an academic or enrichment activity I really support. But I don't just randomly participate in fundraisers for public schools where the average family has twice my HHI. It's ridiculous how much money I gave to those schools over the year. Oh well, hope the kids got something out of it I guess.