Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FOR THE 100TH TIME MYOB
Fixed it for you. You don't walk in another person's shoes. Masks hurt no one. Shut up.
Huh? The question is why parents are required to wear masks, not why some choose to wear them. You are in the wrong thread.
It makes perfect sense to ask for parents to wear masks when the children and staff are masked. Better than having a bunch of kids whining about why they have to wear masks if the parents don't. Having that rule and strictly enforcing it are two different things. I highly doubt the random staff person running the drop off line is going to spend the time to do more than remind parents once or twice. What are they going to do, kick the parent out of line and refuse to let the kid in school? Not hardly...
My kids have not once asked me why they have to wear a mask and I don't (when I'm not wearing one). Even if they did, the answer would be, I got a shot, and you haven't gotten one yet.
Anonymous wrote:Three families at my school lost a parent or grandparent who was a primary caregiver so the relatively minor inconvenience for two more weeks is fine by me to make everyone comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FOR THE 100TH TIME MYOB
Fixed it for you. You don't walk in another person's shoes. Masks hurt no one. Shut up.
Huh? The question is why parents are required to wear masks, not why some choose to wear them. You are in the wrong thread.
It makes perfect sense to ask for parents to wear masks when the children and staff are masked. Better than having a bunch of kids whining about why they have to wear masks if the parents don't. Having that rule and strictly enforcing it are two different things. I highly doubt the random staff person running the drop off line is going to spend the time to do more than remind parents once or twice. What are they going to do, kick the parent out of line and refuse to let the kid in school? Not hardly...
My kids have not once asked me why they have to wear a mask and I don't (when I'm not wearing one). Even if they did, the answer would be, I got a shot, and you haven't gotten one yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FOR THE 100TH TIME MYOB
Fixed it for you. You don't walk in another person's shoes. Masks hurt no one. Shut up.
Huh? The question is why parents are required to wear masks, not why some choose to wear them. You are in the wrong thread.
It makes perfect sense to ask for parents to wear masks when the children and staff are masked. Better than having a bunch of kids whining about why they have to wear masks if the parents don't. Having that rule and strictly enforcing it are two different things. I highly doubt the random staff person running the drop off line is going to spend the time to do more than remind parents once or twice. What are they going to do, kick the parent out of line and refuse to let the kid in school? Not hardly...
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t even realize this is a rule and haven’t been doing it. Wont start now that I know
Anonymous wrote:I agree that it's probably dumb but it's perfectly natural for schools to err on the side of caution with something so easy and harmless. Just do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FOR THE 100TH TIME MYOB
Fixed it for you. You don't walk in another person's shoes. Masks hurt no one. Shut up.
Huh? The question is why parents are required to wear masks, not why some choose to wear them. You are in the wrong thread.
It makes perfect sense to ask for parents to wear masks when the children and staff are masked. Better than having a bunch of kids whining about why they have to wear masks if the parents don't. Having that rule and strictly enforcing it are two different things. I highly doubt the random staff person running the drop off line is going to spend the time to do more than remind parents once or twice. What are they going to do, kick the parent out of line and refuse to let the kid in school? Not hardly...