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by GSD Admin on 10 March 2013 - 16:03
I have an opinion but really what does it matter.
A real programmer? LMAO, FYI for ya little guy, the server recently underwent some major changes and things can get broken. Like have you noticed how fast the site is now?
I hadn't used spell check in a while and now see it is broken.
A real programmer? LMAO, FYI for ya little guy, the server recently underwent some major changes and things can get broken. Like have you noticed how fast the site is now?
I hadn't used spell check in a while and now see it is broken.

by Two Moons on 10 March 2013 - 16:03
Your opinion matters, and to not give it is what the article is about in my opinion.
Little guy........lol, you can't help yourself I suppose.
I agree, change comes with a price.
Little guy........lol, you can't help yourself I suppose.
I agree, change comes with a price.
by beetree on 10 March 2013 - 16:03
It is a not very realistic view of the real issue, but rather a feeble attempt to dismiss the growing call to change that is gaining in our society's reinterpretation of what gun ownership means in the USA, today, and that perception is different than yesterday's.
by joanro on 10 March 2013 - 16:03
Bee, WHAT is not a 'very realistic view of the real issues' ? So you think it's not an over blown attempt to let little kids know it's against the school rules to have a 'gun' in school? That kid must be extremely intimidating to cause the school to suspend him for chewing out a vague resemblance of a gun. All the teacher had to do was throw it on the floor and, presto! Threat reduced to crumbs. LOL. Guess the kid needed to be made an example of. Bunch of idiots, council the other students cause they might have been traumatized by a toast em pop....
by beetree on 10 March 2013 - 17:03
No, more at making fun by a teacher and the use of the letter "L" to humiliate the proper concerns of parents who want to talk about a common sense approach to gun ownership in America today.

by fawndallas on 10 March 2013 - 19:03
Anyone watch a show called Continum? Pure fiction and obvious about it. What is a touch disturbing, take out the traveling back in time (fiction) and see how much of the rest hits home......
Sadly, I too have to teach my son, this is what is right, this is the downside for doing what is right. It makes my stomach turn that I can't tell him to always do what is right and everything will work out.
I will say this, my then 15 year old son, held his head a bit higher when I confronted his principal in front of the school office about the office lies, the principal lieing, gave the proof in full view of everyone, said some choice words, and went to the Superintendent.
Sadly, I too have to teach my son, this is what is right, this is the downside for doing what is right. It makes my stomach turn that I can't tell him to always do what is right and everything will work out.
I will say this, my then 15 year old son, held his head a bit higher when I confronted his principal in front of the school office about the office lies, the principal lieing, gave the proof in full view of everyone, said some choice words, and went to the Superintendent.

by Mindhunt on 10 March 2013 - 20:03
Oh good grief!!!! What about parents behaving as parents? How about asking the boy what he meant to do and did he realize how grown ups could misinterpret what he did in the wake of a scary event? More emotional knee jerk reactions with band aid solutions. More like leeple (lemming people). Think leeple, use your brains and take the effort.
I grew up playing cops and robbers, made guns out of sticks, etc. I remember kids bringing their hunting rifles on the gun rack in their pick up to school because they were going hunting afterward. Heck, I grew up with guns and was taught the difference between fantasy and reality. Taught respect for others and empathy. I was also taught not to overreact and to take a breath to think things through.
I grew up playing cops and robbers, made guns out of sticks, etc. I remember kids bringing their hunting rifles on the gun rack in their pick up to school because they were going hunting afterward. Heck, I grew up with guns and was taught the difference between fantasy and reality. Taught respect for others and empathy. I was also taught not to overreact and to take a breath to think things through.
by beetree on 10 March 2013 - 22:03
Those days are long gone. Time to wake up and smell the modern age of mass murder in the classroom. Your child's classroom is not exempt. This isn't cops and robbers or even how to bring sustenance to the dinner table.

by Two Moons on 10 March 2013 - 22:03
All this from inside the bubble.....LOL
by joanro on 10 March 2013 - 22:03
No it's not cops and robbers, it was harmless piece of pop tart.
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