Anonymous wrote:Please tell me when this child was going to sign into her Facebook account to find this picture and be embarrassed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people (parents and nannies) have common sense, but many don't, unfortunately.
OP's example is a gross invasion of the child's privacy.
Let me guess. She's your average "market rate" nanny. You get the stupidity that you pay for.
For those of you who feel it's no big deal (regardless of the parent's behavior), I doubt you'd think it was funny if you had embarrassing YouTube clips of you floating around. I think it's mean and immature to be entertained by another person's sadness or misfortune. If you want to expose your own embarrassing moments, go ahead with that.
+1
I do not understand our society's desire to post photos or videos embarrassing other people. Personally, I don't care if this girl had the parent's permission, it should not have been posted.
NP
Exactly. Even the child should have some basic rights to privacy. Shame on parents and nannies who violate children that way.
Dear lord, if you can't learn to laugh at yourself than life is going to seem very cruel and unpleasant. The child wasn't being abused and the photo wasn't a way of bullying. It was to find humor in common everyday events. I highly doubt this child is going to grow up to be an adult and say "what an evil person my nanny and parents were for posting a funny picture of me as a baby", i know plenty of adults that post their own funny baby pictures. Why not teach children not to taken themselves to seriously and find humor in every situation? Learn to be confident and not care what others think? A funny baby picture shouldn't scar a child for life, it should be a funny story to tell to all your friends because your so funny, confident and awesome!
Anonymous wrote:No, I would never allow my nanny to post pictures of my children on her Facebook page. Good grief, why on earth would someone consider doing this? These are your charges not your own children, friends or relatives. Can you imagine pulling out your iPhone at your next client or board meetings, posting a few pics and tag lining "hanging out with cool CEOs, So awesome!"
Be professional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people (parents and nannies) have common sense, but many don't, unfortunately.
OP's example is a gross invasion of the child's privacy.
Let me guess. She's your average "market rate" nanny. You get the stupidity that you pay for.
For those of you who feel it's no big deal (regardless of the parent's behavior), I doubt you'd think it was funny if you had embarrassing YouTube clips of you floating around. I think it's mean and immature to be entertained by another person's sadness or misfortune. If you want to expose your own embarrassing moments, go ahead with that.
+1
I do not understand our society's desire to post photos or videos embarrassing other people. Personally, I don't care if this girl had the parent's permission, it should not have been posted.
NP
Exactly. Even the child should have some basic rights to privacy. Shame on parents and nannies who violate children that way.
Dear lord, if you can't learn to laugh at yourself than life is going to seem very cruel and unpleasant. The child wasn't being abused and the photo wasn't a way of bullying. It was to find humor in common everyday events. I highly doubt this child is going to grow up to be an adult and say "what an evil person my nanny and parents were for posting a funny picture of me as a baby", i know plenty of adults that post their own funny baby pictures. Why not teach children not to taken themselves to seriously and find humor in every situation? Learn to be confident and not care what others think? A funny baby picture shouldn't scar a child for life, it should be a funny story to tell to all your friends because your so funny, confident and awesome!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people (parents and nannies) have common sense, but many don't, unfortunately.
OP's example is a gross invasion of the child's privacy.
Let me guess. She's your average "market rate" nanny. You get the stupidity that you pay for.
For those of you who feel it's no big deal (regardless of the parent's behavior), I doubt you'd think it was funny if you had embarrassing YouTube clips of you floating around. I think it's mean and immature to be entertained by another person's sadness or misfortune. If you want to expose your own embarrassing moments, go ahead with that.
+1
I do not understand our society's desire to post photos or videos embarrassing other people. Personally, I don't care if this girl had the parent's permission, it should not have been posted.
NP
Exactly. Even the child should have some basic rights to privacy. Shame on parents and nannies who violate children that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
Why are you insisting on keeping the drama? I am a member of both groups and I saw the first post. The nanny said that she had permission to post the photo. I have been watching both groups after the drama and it seems like the want to leave it behind. Grow up and let it go. There is no need to make a post about something that is false because the girl stated she had permission to post. Move on.
OP here, I wanted to get parents opinions, like I stated. Maybe seeing these opinions this nanny will realize her error. And I did not post anything false, I just included my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people (parents and nannies) have common sense, but many don't, unfortunately.
OP's example is a gross invasion of the child's privacy.
Let me guess. She's your average "market rate" nanny. You get the stupidity that you pay for.
For those of you who feel it's no big deal (regardless of the parent's behavior), I doubt you'd think it was funny if you had embarrassing YouTube clips of you floating around. I think it's mean and immature to be entertained by another person's sadness or misfortune. If you want to expose your own embarrassing moments, go ahead with that.
+1
I do not understand our society's desire to post photos or videos embarrassing other people. Personally, I don't care if this girl had the parent's permission, it should not have been posted.
NP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people (parents and nannies) have common sense, but many don't, unfortunately.
OP's example is a gross invasion of the child's privacy.
Let me guess. She's your average "market rate" nanny. You get the stupidity that you pay for.
For those of you who feel it's no big deal (regardless of the parent's behavior), I doubt you'd think it was funny if you had embarrassing YouTube clips of you floating around. I think it's mean and immature to be entertained by another person's sadness or misfortune. If you want to expose your own embarrassing moments, go ahead with that.
Anonymous wrote:Okay so you're saying that the little girl knew her nanny posted the picture and now feels embarrassed? Right. You guys are making a big deal out of nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Some people (parents and nannies) have common sense, but many don't, unfortunately.
OP's example is a gross invasion of the child's privacy.
Let me guess. She's your average "market rate" nanny. You get the stupidity that you pay for.