Anonymous wrote:School employee here… we just had a lovely set of four siblings sent home to quarantine. All were maskless this week. Another set of two siblings also under quarantine. Yep, no mask as well. Masked kids have not had to quarantine by the end of the week. Just anecdotal information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This tread is full of the most hateful comments and it’s uncomfortable reading them.
I agree. The amount of vitriol directed at parents who have decided that masking is not necessary or appropriate for their child is appalling. I am saddened to see such hateful comments.
There is a lot of ugliness coming from unmasked families in this tread.
Anonymous wrote:School employee here… we just had a lovely set of four siblings sent home to quarantine. All were maskless this week. Another set of two siblings also under quarantine. Yep, no mask as well. Masked kids have not had to quarantine by the end of the week. Just anecdotal information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On Monday, my son's teacher thanked her 4th grade students who continued to wear masks. Later in the day, she lectured and guilted the maskless. One of the kids felt bad and put a mask on, insisting he wanted to wear it but his parents decided not. Needless to say, my son came home pleading with me to NOT sign the waiver (even though he recently had covid and has antibodies).
I hope that teacher is fired. If she has a problem with the decision she should direct her complaints to the diocese- not guilt trip a bunch of nine year olds.
You've had him tested for antibodies to know this? Because up to 33% of infections produce no lasting antibodies.
PP here -- We really like his teacher and my son does not want to upset her by going maskless. The teacher is clearly fearful of catching Covid (hence the lecture) and apparently believes the ill-fitting masks are protecting everyone. Clearly they are not as studies prove, as my son caught Covid during holiday break, most likely from that classroom (since we did not go anywhere else). At best, the masks are only catching some sneezes and spittle.
Our son's pediatrician wrote an order for antibody test so hopefully that test will prevent him from having to quarantine if he eventually opts to go maskless. The school's stricter mandatory quarantine policies are the prime reason for many parents not signing the mask waiver.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On Monday, my son's teacher thanked her 4th grade students who continued to wear masks. Later in the day, she lectured and guilted the maskless. One of the kids felt bad and put a mask on, insisting he wanted to wear it but his parents decided not. Needless to say, my son came home pleading with me to NOT sign the waiver (even though he recently had covid and has antibodies).
I hope that teacher is fired. If she has a problem with the decision she should direct her complaints to the diocese- not guilt trip a bunch of nine year olds.
You've had him tested for antibodies to know this? Because up to 33% of infections produce no lasting antibodies.
PP here -- We really like his teacher and my son does not want to upset her by going maskless. The teacher is clearly fearful of catching Covid (hence the lecture) and apparently believes the ill-fitting masks are protecting everyone. Clearly they are not as studies prove, as my son caught Covid during holiday break, most likely from that classroom (since we did not go anywhere else). At best, the masks are only catching some sneezes and spittle.
Our son's pediatrician wrote an order for antibody test so hopefully that test will prevent him from having to quarantine if he eventually opts to go maskless. The school's stricter mandatory quarantine policies are the prime reason for many parents not signing the mask waiver.
Anonymous wrote:My kid was called a “fear monster” for wearing a mask at school today. I assume she was called a ‘fear monger’, but the message is clear. As if our country wasn’t divided already, now our school that I have always found as a haven, certainly is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On Monday, my son's teacher thanked her 4th grade students who continued to wear masks. Later in the day, she lectured and guilted the maskless. One of the kids felt bad and put a mask on, insisting he wanted to wear it but his parents decided not. Needless to say, my son came home pleading with me to NOT sign the waiver (even though he recently had covid and has antibodies).
I hope that teacher is fired. If she has a problem with the decision she should direct her complaints to the diocese- not guilt trip a bunch of nine year olds.
You've had him tested for antibodies to know this? Because up to 33% of infections produce no lasting antibodies.
Thank you. The U.S. has the most cases, hospitalizations and deaths than any country on the planet despite our advanced medical system - guess what, it's a serious disease and we Americans aren't terribly healthy to tolerate it. This isn't experimental. 4.7 Billion people have been vaccinated. No hospitals and morgues are filling up with vaccine or masking injuries, are they? Let's continue to do the smart, safe and simple things to get us through the next month - numbers are already coming down.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This tread is full of the most hateful comments and it’s uncomfortable reading them.
I agree. The amount of vitriol directed at parents who have decided that masking is not necessary or appropriate for their child is appalling. I am saddened to see such hateful comments.
There is a lot of ugliness coming from unmasked families in this tread.
Which statements do you find particularly ugly? I feel like more of the vitriol has been coming from the pro-maskers toward those that support the diocese’s decision. I admittedly haven’t read the entire thread though.
Diocese of Richmond is mask Optional. Because they’re sane and not neurotic weirdos
For the love of God. If you want your kid masked, then go to Public school. Stop
trying to have your cake and eat it too. At Catholic schools, we want it optional. It’s the parents choice. They are children. Shame on any parent putting a mask on their innocent child. You’re a bad mom. There, I said it
Yeah the same Vatican that hides behind walls and goes around telling nations that they can’t protect their borders because they need to build bridges not walls? That Vatican?
Last time I checked, Francis was not Jesus.
By all means wear a diaper on your face if you think it’s doing anything. Two years into this stupid cloth mask nonsense for a virus that is barely more than the flu and which said masks don’t do anything anyway. Talk about going mad. Did you inject yourself with the Big Pharma experimental mRNA “vaccine” too, the one that doesn’t stop you from getting or spreading COVID? Again, talk about going mad …
Wear a mask if you want. Inject your kids with experimental pharmaceutical products if you want. Stop trying to FORCE other parents to make the same choices as you
It would help your position if you would speak more respectfully. It’s disingenuous to say Covid is “barely more than the flu”. I went to a funeral for the mother of a young child in our school community just a few weeks ago. There are arguments to be made about the costs vs benefits of masking. I’d prefer to hear the rational ones.
Anonymous wrote:My kid was called a “fear monster” for wearing a mask at school today. I assume she was called a ‘fear monger’, but the message is clear. As if our country wasn’t divided already, now our school that I have always found as a haven, certainly is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This tread is full of the most hateful comments and it’s uncomfortable reading them.
+1. We were considering our parish school for our rising kinder, but this whole discussion has be thinking differently. The hatefulness of the posters are frightening.
I think that there are a lot of trolls on this thread. Our school has handled this beautifully. I think each school does have its own culture so talking to parents is important. So where are Catholic school is very diverse because we don't draw from wealthier areas, we are small - other schools are very affluent and have different demographics. In our school 98% of the kids opted to remained masked. No one is being mean to the kids unmasked. Families are tight within the grades and friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This tread is full of the most hateful comments and it’s uncomfortable reading them.
I agree. The amount of vitriol directed at parents who have decided that masking is not necessary or appropriate for their child is appalling. I am saddened to see such hateful comments.
There is a lot of ugliness coming from unmasked families in this tread.
Which statements do you find particularly ugly? I feel like more of the vitriol has been coming from the pro-maskers toward those that support the diocese’s decision. I admittedly haven’t read the entire thread though.
I posted some examples above. There is a lot more but I have some things to do
We don’t need to see them all again. If pp wants to see them she can scroll back the 50 pages. Once was enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This tread is full of the most hateful comments and it’s uncomfortable reading them.
I agree. The amount of vitriol directed at parents who have decided that masking is not necessary or appropriate for their child is appalling. I am saddened to see such hateful comments.
There is a lot of ugliness coming from unmasked families in this tread.
Which statements do you find particularly ugly? I feel like more of the vitriol has been coming from the pro-maskers toward those that support the diocese’s decision. I admittedly haven’t read the entire thread though.
I posted some examples above. There is a lot more but I have some things to do