Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, yea. You're in Virginia, after all.
+1
Home of the muthafukin NRA.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher has a picture of her holding a gun, I will not say her name or anything but my 6th grader DD found her on Facebook, and she has that picture on Public, of course she was the only teacher without her mask on today. The other 3 teachers had their masks on and so did most of the other kids.
Anonymous wrote:Okay? I’m a teacher and know many who have open carry permits. I’m one of them. You have no idea. I don’t think anyone should be posting any photos on social media publicly and have an issue of that poor judgement, not the gun. I also do not think they should be publicly tweeting anything.
As you can see what some find okay, others find offensive. Keep with anonymous forums. Good advice to all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The picture is inappropriate. It’s important to not show all online events you’re an educator. Drunk or sexually suggestive pics should be in private settings as well. It’s ok to have those pictures, have a gun, whatever; but kids are curious and will find anything public. Be more discreet.
You’re really comparing hunting with sexually suggestive activities?? You’re a psycho. A gun is a tool. Like a shovel. Not like a stripper pole.
DP. Actually it's far worse. A stripper pole never murdered a class of 6 year olds. A gun is a LETHAL WEAPON and the context is that of a SCHOOL EMPLOYEE.
The USA is the only country in the world that makes a habit of getting its minors murdered by guns on school grounds.
In that context, public photographs of school-associated individuals brandishing guns are unacceptable.
It seems like a no-brainer to anyone with two neurons to rub together, but the fact it's generating some controversy even on the very liberal DCUM is exhibit A for why we still have a problem with gun violence, long after other countries simply enact drastic laws to saves their citizens' lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The picture is inappropriate. It’s important to not show all online events you’re an educator. Drunk or sexually suggestive pics should be in private settings as well. It’s ok to have those pictures, have a gun, whatever; but kids are curious and will find anything public. Be more discreet.
You’re really comparing hunting with sexually suggestive activities?? You’re a psycho. A gun is a tool. Like a shovel. Not like a stripper pole.
Anonymous wrote:The picture is inappropriate. It’s important to not show all online events you’re an educator. Drunk or sexually suggestive pics should be in private settings as well. It’s ok to have those pictures, have a gun, whatever; but kids are curious and will find anything public. Be more discreet.
Anonymous wrote:
My family hunts (on horseback, with dogs) but I don't want teachers publicly posting pictures of themselves with guns.
This country has a problem with school shootings. No teachers should advertise their gun ownership. They can have as many private pics as they want, and what they do on their own time is their business. But no public gun persona.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guns are legal, sweetheart.
Guns and schools together are intensely anxiety provoking. It is appropriate not keep these things in entirely separate spheres.
Why can't teachers keep there photos of themselves with guns out if the classroom and preferably away from social media where the kids can see it even if it legal.
Is that too much to ask sweetheart?
I took a gun to school. Every day. Ammunition too. No one died.
I lettered all 4 years on my school’s Varsity rifle team. We were mostly undefeated, but one of the private military academies relegated our rifle team to 2nd in my senior year.
You sound hysterical, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what? …you need a hobby
Like OP her daughter is turning into a tedious, easily offended, anxiety-ridden, self-appointed internet policewoman. Bet she also gives long winded, self-congratulatory sermons with her eyes closed, parroting something she just read on HuffPo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guns are legal, sweetheart.
Guns and schools together are intensely anxiety provoking. It is appropriate not keep these things in entirely separate spheres.
Why can't teachers keep there photos of themselves with guns out if the classroom and preferably away from social media where the kids can see it even if it legal.
Is that too much to ask sweetheart?