Agreed 100%.
Poor parenting through and through. One of the worst things that can happen to a child is to have poor parenting that lets them down every step of the way.
Agreed 100%.
Poor parenting through and through. One of the worst things that can happen to a child is to have poor parenting that lets them down every step of the way.
You’ll understand when you have kids of your own.
“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never harm me.” But in 2020 sticks and stones are no longer a danger and words cut like swords.
I have kids and I teach them not to be sensitive and to focus on things that really matter.
Yup.
Should not be working on WoW. Very unprofessional.
This is a stupid line used on toddlers to keep them from bugging their teacher when someone calls them a name, which is about every five minutes or so for them. Adults know the the pen is often mightier than the sword.
I understand just fine that online games aren’t good for infant kids with impressionable minds where other players bad behavior can seriously affect them.
Do you scold them for not using the b-word?
Seems like a failure of the parent in that example. If you’re explaining something so harshly and poorly that a child is visibly getting upset, then you’ve failed as a parent.
Failed parenting should not be defended because it impacts all of society.
They don’t use the B word because I teach them that using bad language is a crutch for people who do not have a vast vocabulary and are not able to express themselves in a less offensive way.
Just a bunch of snowflakes who are using their children as an excuse to be politically correct.
Well, that or a bunch of snowflakes that let their children’s emotions dictate their actions and opinions.
Quite sad to see some people using children as tools to push their own agendas.
Please reread what I wrote earlier. The kid wasn’t upset, but his parents felt awkward about having to interrupt their gaming session to discuss etiquette instead. The failures that you’re talking about are the ones who don’t feel awkward when their kid encounters this
Anyone (in the US) should be able to say whatever they want, but the people who they offend should also be allowed to punch them in the face if they do.
Chances are a small child of that age, that wouldn’t know what this word would mean (3-4 years old?), shouldn’t be playing Warcraft in general. Why is it that one word that stood out? Why weren’t they asking questions about wolf people walking around, or peoples bones showing through their clothing? Again, this seems like a failure of the parent.
Now it’s an agenda. The sinister politeness party, no doubt.
In the US, you can raise your kids however you want, as long as they do not break the rules that everyone agrees on.
People spamming the forum about a word change calling other people snowflakes