Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your chosen line of work ever impacted your child? I don’t mean time not spent together or missed games, performes, field trips etc. I mean your child has been shunned for what you do. For example, working at an organization like Planned Parenthood and your child attends catholic school. I’m in a similar position (and my DS is new to the school last year) and I can only think I am to blame. I gave it a year knowing transitions are hard, but now I’m considering a job change. I should note that I never flaunted where I worked but it’s on my LinkedIn and I am easy to google.
If you work for Trump, you are not welcome in my home. I will invite your child if they are nice to my child- but they will know exactly where we stand on the immorality of Trump.
They will start to question you and make you explain why you support a President who denigrates women, the disabled and minorities.
You have real issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The tone is set at the top and Trump has done his best to create this polarization through both how he behaves along with his policies. Departments like DHS do very important work but it is being trashed because of Trump's policies. It's sad that Sarah Huckabee Sanders (who I dislike) gets run out of a restaurant because of her position, but when her boss insults everyone who disagrees with him (Little Marco, Lyin' Ted etc etc) the tone he has established creates this kind of blow back. Trump is trashing the Justice Department and the FBI and I'm sure that can have an effect on kids attitudes towards their parents jobs.
I think there is a huge difference between someone caught in one of the currently higher profile gov agencies who has been a civil servant for 10 years or 20 and someone who is higher up in the administration.
I think the real question here is: if you work for planned parenthood, should you send your kid to Catholic school? Maybe it is a mismatch in where you send your child and the activities they are in when it comes to your personal beliefs/job. If you are second guessing your career because of it, it says something about how you are feeling about your career--not the people around you!
Anonymous wrote:I work in the non-enforcement side of immigration. I basically act like I work at the CIA so my kids aren't shunned or ostracized from the current social media mobs.
Anonymous wrote:The tone is set at the top and Trump has done his best to create this polarization through both how he behaves along with his policies. Departments like DHS do very important work but it is being trashed because of Trump's policies. It's sad that Sarah Huckabee Sanders (who I dislike) gets run out of a restaurant because of her position, but when her boss insults everyone who disagrees with him (Little Marco, Lyin' Ted etc etc) the tone he has established creates this kind of blow back. Trump is trashing the Justice Department and the FBI and I'm sure that can have an effect on kids attitudes towards their parents jobs.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your chosen line of work ever impacted your child? I don’t mean time not spent together or missed games, performes, field trips etc. I mean your child has been shunned for what you do. For example, working at an organization like Planned Parenthood and your child attends catholic school. I’m in a similar position (and my DS is new to the school last year) and I can only think I am to blame. I gave it a year knowing transitions are hard, but now I’m considering a job change. I should note that I never flaunted where I worked but it’s on my LinkedIn and I am easy to google.
If you work for Trump, you are not welcome in my home. I will invite your child if they are nice to my child- but they will know exactly where we stand on the immorality of Trump.
They will start to question you and make you explain why you support a President who denigrates women, the disabled and minorities.
You have real issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your chosen line of work ever impacted your child? I don’t mean time not spent together or missed games, performes, field trips etc. I mean your child has been shunned for what you do. For example, working at an organization like Planned Parenthood and your child attends catholic school. I’m in a similar position (and my DS is new to the school last year) and I can only think I am to blame. I gave it a year knowing transitions are hard, but now I’m considering a job change. I should note that I never flaunted where I worked but it’s on my LinkedIn and I am easy to google.
If you work for Trump, you are not welcome in my home. I will invite your child if they are nice to my child- but they will know exactly where we stand on the immorality of Trump.
They will start to question you and make you explain why you support a President who denigrates women, the disabled and minorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back and I want to steer this back on course. The response to many of these questions confirms my hypothesis. I like my job and have had some success here, but I also don’t want to have a child that resents me or thinks that I put a career before his happiness.
Have you considered moving out to a place like Burke or Chantilly where people don't get so crazy about politics?
We have long since passed the point where it is about politics.
It is about basic human decency.
Anyone who thinks it is okay to ostracize or worse to children in order to enact revenge on their parent's for their hope for a better life or for simply wanting a job is certainly lacking in basic human decency.
There. Fixed that for you.
You know, you can be against poor treatment of children in all situations, from the illegal immigrant children far away at the border, to the ignorant treatment of OPs kid right here in your own DC bubble.
Totes!!! You can also surely recognize one is more serious than the other right? Right?
And the pot calling the kettle black ness of writing out how awful it is to be mean to kids based on a parents politics, when (based on Jeff’s note) those very politics are to separate kids from their families? Right??
Anonymous wrote:Has your chosen line of work ever impacted your child? I don’t mean time not spent together or missed games, performes, field trips etc. I mean your child has been shunned for what you do. For example, working at an organization like Planned Parenthood and your child attends catholic school. I’m in a similar position (and my DS is new to the school last year) and I can only think I am to blame. I gave it a year knowing transitions are hard, but now I’m considering a job change. I should note that I never flaunted where I worked but it’s on my LinkedIn and I am easy to google.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back and I want to steer this back on course. The response to many of these questions confirms my hypothesis. I like my job and have had some success here, but I also don’t want to have a child that resents me or thinks that I put a career before his happiness.
Have you considered moving out to a place like Burke or Chantilly where people don't get so crazy about politics?
We have long since passed the point where it is about politics.
It is about basic human decency.
Anyone who thinks it is okay to ostracize or worse to children in order to enact revenge on their parent's for their hope for a better life or for simply wanting a job is certainly lacking in basic human decency.
There. Fixed that for you.
You know, you can be against poor treatment of children in all situations, from the illegal immigrant children far away at the border, to the ignorant treatment of OPs kid right here in your own DC bubble.
Anonymous wrote:I have a neighbor with a giant trump sign in his yard. I will admit that I avoid him and will alter my walking path if he is out in his yard. I strongly believe that this administration is immoral and I think that people that advertise their allegiance to their policies are not people I want to know. We are brown skinned and I guess I have a zero tolerance policy toward racists and those who enable racists by averting their eyes or downplaying racist actions.
That said, best I can tell, his kid lives in my back yard and plays basketball all the time with my son. I treat my son’s friend like I treat all other kids that wander through our house/yard- tell them to stay off the flower beds, offer lemonade and snacks, ask them whether they want to call their parents for permission to stay for dinner etc. The Trump supporter’s kid is treated no differently- why should he be?