Anonymous wrote:No one is faulting the families of the girls who died last summer. We are saying the ones who plan to send their kids back this summer are certifiable.
Anonymous wrote:New report shows like 9 pages of deficiencies in Mystics application. Even after these children died they still can’t get their act together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the moms are bat$hit crazy over the fact that their kid cannot have negative memories of their precious camp and therefore MUST return to be brainwashed by the camp cult. It’s like you can’t be a successful elitist in TX if you didn’t adore your elitist summer camp experience.
Some of the DCUM "moms" are batshit crazy over the fact that some families can make their own decisions.
And then those families ask for sympathy over foolhardy risk taking decisions.
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Keyboard warrior knows everything about everything and always makes the right decision.
You are a fvking idiot.
We know you are a Mystic Stan. You are wasting your breath. We aren’t dazzled by the Eastlands here and we have no skin in the Texas summer camp game. Anyone that would return their child to that specific camp instead of another is a fool.
I hate TX and would never send my kids anywhere near there.
But the dumbass PP is trying to say that the parents who sent their kids there last summer were making "foolhardy risk taking decisions".
PP is making shit up about these poor families. It's gross. Leave them alone.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like Eastlands still have no plans for any kind of emergency. An outbreak of illness. A fire. An armed intruder. Or bad weather.
I wonder how many injuries or bad occurrences have been quietly dealt with in the past.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's pathetic is that even after the terrible tragedy of last summer, the camp owners couldn't come up with a thorough safety plan for emergencies for this summer. They seem incredibly incompetent and unable to answer basic safety-related questions in court.
Did you bother to look at the comments back on the plan they submitted? Assuming the state applies the same expectations to other camps, nearly all of them are going to have deficiencies.
I imagine the state will try to withhold a license to open the other camp. But it just be for show. They will appeal and immediately be allowed to open.
Anonymous wrote:The camp owners are clearly focused on reopening purely for financial reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the moms are bat$hit crazy over the fact that their kid cannot have negative memories of their precious camp and therefore MUST return to be brainwashed by the camp cult. It’s like you can’t be a successful elitist in TX if you didn’t adore your elitist summer camp experience.
No different from New England. This has nothing to do with Texas and everything to do with wealthy parents with a certain childhood.
Please name the New England camp that attempted to reopen after 27 people died there the prior summer?
It’s not weird that rich people like summer camp. It’s weird that rather than just choose a different elite camp, their kids must go back to THIS CAMP after it has proven it’s total incompetence, if not criminal negligence.
About 100 people die in flash floods in the US each year. Considering this was the largest flood in documented history in this area, and significantly more severe than others in recent years, you haven't made much a case for "total incompetence." FEMA agreed that the level of risk was low enough to warrant removing the Special Flood Hazard Area designation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the moms are bat$hit crazy over the fact that their kid cannot have negative memories of their precious camp and therefore MUST return to be brainwashed by the camp cult. It’s like you can’t be a successful elitist in TX if you didn’t adore your elitist summer camp experience.
No different from New England. This has nothing to do with Texas and everything to do with wealthy parents with a certain childhood.
Please name the New England camp that attempted to reopen after 27 people died there the prior summer?
It’s not weird that rich people like summer camp. It’s weird that rather than just choose a different elite camp, their kids must go back to THIS CAMP after it has proven it’s total incompetence, if not criminal negligence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's pathetic is that even after the terrible tragedy of last summer, the camp owners couldn't come up with a thorough safety plan for emergencies for this summer. They seem incredibly incompetent and unable to answer basic safety-related questions in court.
Did you bother to look at the comments back on the plan they submitted? Assuming the state applies the same expectations to other camps, nearly all of them are going to have deficiencies.
I imagine the state will try to withhold a license to open the other camp. But it just be for show. They will appeal and immediately be allowed to open.
Anonymous wrote:What's pathetic is that even after the terrible tragedy of last summer, the camp owners couldn't come up with a thorough safety plan for emergencies for this summer. They seem incredibly incompetent and unable to answer basic safety-related questions in court.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the moms are bat$hit crazy over the fact that their kid cannot have negative memories of their precious camp and therefore MUST return to be brainwashed by the camp cult. It’s like you can’t be a successful elitist in TX if you didn’t adore your elitist summer camp experience.
No different from New England. This has nothing to do with Texas and everything to do with wealthy parents with a certain childhood.