Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Young football players will be fine. Wait a sec. The freshman Georgia State quarterback got covid, was asymptomatic, and now has a heart defect that will end his football days. But, as Lord Farquaad said -- "Some of you may die, but it is a price I am willing to pay."
My kid’s friend (18yo) got Covid and then a Kawasaki-like illness early in the summer and it was NOT pleasant.
Anonymous wrote:Young football players will be fine. Wait a sec. The freshman Georgia State quarterback got covid, was asymptomatic, and now has a heart defect that will end his football days. But, as Lord Farquaad said -- "Some of you may die, but it is a price I am willing to pay."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Blame it on the schools, who were hungry for money, not the kids. Did they seriously expect kids to go to college to socially distance and wear masks at parties, after they have been holed up at home for months? That was a ridiculous assumption. I didn’t pay ten of thousands of dollars to send my kid to prison. I sent him to college knowing the risk, which I have assessed as low for my healthy 18 year-old. If the universities are not comfortable with the risk then they should not have allowed students back on campus. However, they knew that if they did the right thing, they would cost their institutions millions. Now, they are blaming the students.
Oh boy! You don’t get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Blame it on the schools, who were hungry for money, not the kids. Did they seriously expect kids to go to college to socially distance and wear masks at parties, after they have been holed up at home for months? That was a ridiculous assumption. I didn’t pay ten of thousands of dollars to send my kid to prison. I sent him to college knowing the risk, which I have assessed as low for my healthy 18 year-old. If the universities are not comfortable with the risk then they should not have allowed students back on campus. However, they knew that if they did the right thing, they would cost their institutions millions. Now, they are blaming the students.
This is also a common sentiment. Your kid being at college and being required to wear a mask and practice social distancing is not equivalent to prison.
Anonymous wrote:I would add the obvious:
This thread is about Notre Dame, but it could be about any number of other schools. My alma mater maybe got it right, but it was not until the very last second before they pulled the plug on in-person classes. By then, of course, people had made the commitments -- buying dorm things, etc. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Screen shot of IU Facebook Post?
Search Indiana University on Facebook, click their main page. It’s a reply to the first comment on the “sanctions for non-compliance” post which was posted four hours ago. FWIW, of the 14 reactions to the comment, 8 are the Orange mad face, four are the laughing react, 3 sad reacts, and one wow react— so obviously not a popular opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Screen shot of IU Facebook Post?
Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Blame it on the schools, who were hungry for money, not the kids. Did they seriously expect kids to go to college to socially distance and wear masks at parties, after they have been holed up at home for months? That was a ridiculous assumption. I didn’t pay ten of thousands of dollars to send my kid to prison. I sent him to college knowing the risk, which I have assessed as low for my healthy 18 year-old. If the universities are not comfortable with the risk then they should not have allowed students back on campus. However, they knew that if they did the right thing, they would cost their institutions millions. Now, they are blaming the students.
Anonymous wrote:Let's throw IU into the mix here. There have been parties going on for weeks. Last night one was big enough that the school says they are identifying participants so they can be suspended. In response to the fb post about this one of the first parent responses was
"I am encouraging both my college kids to party and enjoy their college life. No one has the right to take away their Civil liberties! I will be the first person to file a lawsuit to protect their freedoms"
This sentiment is not uncommon on the IU parent pages. Along with exasperation and anger at the new rules designed to keep kids safe. Parents are telling their kids to ignore the rules. IU has a lot of students.
Anonymous wrote:Young football players will be fine. Wait a sec. The freshman Georgia State quarterback got covid, was asymptomatic, and now has a heart defect that will end his football days. But, as Lord Farquaad said -- "Some of you may die, but it is a price I am willing to pay."