Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don't buy the we're-just-a-regular-family-who-shops-at-Target White House propaganda and then you'll feel better.
Whether you like it or not, this is a very, very wealthy family who send their daughter to an elite private school that costs more per year than most Americans earn per year. It is what it is.
The 25 Secret Service agents that are being used on the trip is, however, excessive by any standard. The family should reimburse the taxpayers for any security for the trip that is beyond what is normally spent to protect this child on a daily basis. After all, this is a completely voluntary trip to a very dangerous country -- we
Different poster here, but Mexico's drug violence is now legendary and there are warnings for all spring breakers. Even 22 year olds are warned not to go. Why was Florida not good enough for a 13 year old?
The shoot Black teenagers in Florida.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don't buy the we're-just-a-regular-family-who-shops-at-Target White House propaganda and then you'll feel better.
Whether you like it or not, this is a very, very wealthy family who send their daughter to an elite private school that costs more per year than most Americans earn per year. It is what it is.
The 25 Secret Service agents that are being used on the trip is, however, excessive by any standard. The family should reimburse the taxpayers for any security for the trip that is beyond what is normally spent to protect this child on a daily basis. After all, this is a completely voluntary trip to a very dangerous country -- we shouldn't have to foot additional security costs for that choice.
They send their daughter to an elite private school, in part, because it's easier and cheaper to protect her there. If the Obama girls went to public school, they'd be on separate campuses and need twice the security. The Secret Service would also have no say in who their classmates were, and so would need to provide even more supervision. The cost to the taxpayer would be huge.
Part of the reality of sending your kid to Sidwell (or frankly the public schools that serve wealthier areas in DC and MD) is that these things are part of the program. Malia should be able to participate in as much of what her classmates participate in as possible.
The Sidwell lower and upper schools ARE on different campuses, so they are in two different locations. There would be no cost differential between protecting the girls at a private vs. public school. In fact, Amy Carter famously went to public school in DC. If the secret service can (and does) protect these girls when on Spring Break in Mexico, on various trips with their parents or walking down the street in the Inaugural Parade, they can certainly protect them at a DC public school.
The point is, that this wealthy family, like so many others in DC, chooses to go private. This is, of course, their right, but we also have the right to judge it for what it is: a rich person's choice, not a Presidential family's necessity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don't buy the we're-just-a-regular-family-who-shops-at-Target White House propaganda and then you'll feel better.
Whether you like it or not, this is a very, very wealthy family who send their daughter to an elite private school that costs more per year than most Americans earn per year. It is what it is.
The 25 Secret Service agents that are being used on the trip is, however, excessive by any standard. The family should reimburse the taxpayers for any security for the trip that is beyond what is normally spent to protect this child on a daily basis. After all, this is a completely voluntary trip to a very dangerous country -- we shouldn't have to foot additional security costs for that choice.
They send their daughter to an elite private school, in part, because it's easier and cheaper to protect her there. If the Obama girls went to public school, they'd be on separate campuses and need twice the security. The Secret Service would also have no say in who their classmates were, and so would need to provide even more supervision. The cost to the taxpayer would be huge.
Part of the reality of sending your kid to Sidwell (or frankly the public schools that serve wealthier areas in DC and MD) is that these things are part of the program. Malia should be able to participate in as much of what her classmates participate in as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don't buy the we're-just-a-regular-family-who-shops-at-Target White House propaganda and then you'll feel better.
Whether you like it or not, this is a very, very wealthy family who send their daughter to an elite private school that costs more per year than most Americans earn per year. It is what it is.
The 25 Secret Service agents that are being used on the trip is, however, excessive by any standard. The family should reimburse the taxpayers for any security for the trip that is beyond what is normally spent to protect this child on a daily basis. After all, this is a completely voluntary trip to a very dangerous country -- we shouldn't have to foot additional security costs for that choice.
They send their daughter to an elite private school, in part, because it's easier and cheaper to protect her there. If the Obama girls went to public school, they'd be on separate campuses and need twice the security. The Secret Service would also have no say in who their classmates were, and so would need to provide even more supervision. The cost to the taxpayer would be huge.
Part of the reality of sending your kid to Sidwell (or frankly the public schools that serve wealthier areas in DC and MD) is that these things are part of the program. Malia should be able to participate in as much of what her classmates participate in as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don't buy the we're-just-a-regular-family-who-shops-at-Target White House propaganda and then you'll feel better.
Whether you like it or not, this is a very, very wealthy family who send their daughter to an elite private school that costs more per year than most Americans earn per year. It is what it is.
The 25 Secret Service agents that are being used on the trip is, however, excessive by any standard. The family should reimburse the taxpayers for any security for the trip that is beyond what is normally spent to protect this child on a daily basis. After all, this is a completely voluntary trip to a very dangerous country -- we shouldn't have to foot additional security costs for that choice.
You simply cannot be serious.
Anonymous wrote:Times like these I wish we restricted postings to those actually living in the DC area, because it's pretty obvious the OP and her friends channeling the shock are not at all local. Student trips abroad at this age are very common here.
Anonymous wrote:Just don't buy the we're-just-a-regular-family-who-shops-at-Target White House propaganda and then you'll feel better.
Whether you like it or not, this is a very, very wealthy family who send their daughter to an elite private school that costs more per year than most Americans earn per year. It is what it is.
The 25 Secret Service agents that are being used on the trip is, however, excessive by any standard. The family should reimburse the taxpayers for any security for the trip that is beyond what is normally spent to protect this child on a daily basis. After all, this is a completely voluntary trip to a very dangerous country -- we shouldn't have to foot additional security costs for that choice.