Seemingly trivial things that intrigue you
Comments
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Of 40 years ago. Might be out of date by now.
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I don't think it's unreasonable to be dismayed at children identifying as a cat.
Intrigued to know if this persona involves burying your poo in a flower bed and eating mice.
Does anyone know?
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It would be if it were true. Which it probably isn't.
It's more dismaying that Miss Snuffy takes these reports at face value.
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He is describing a child in fancy dress. By that logic, my 8 year old has identifies as a cat, a triceratops, a princess and a robot in the last few weeks
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You don't think there are furries?
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Umm. No. People like dressing up. But maybe you're playing cat & mouse with me...
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See, it's real. It's a bit obsessive. Not quite "let's get these kids military college to un-gay them" level, I'll grant you. But as a parent you'd probably want to have a chat with them about moderation.
So yeah, but I got the shit kicked out of me for being clever and not quite being in tune with any given season's most accepted sartorial choices.
Not entirely sure I'd have made it out alive if I rocked up to school in a chipmunk onesie.
Have kids changed that much, or are the onesie wearers just targets for rubber band propelled projectiles like they always used to be?
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I suspect that dressing up has just become more common, and therefore seems a bit less weird to others.
Me, I don't do dressing up, other than for concerts and bike rides. Never done fancy dress.
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It's a bit more than dressing up though. It's dressing up all the time, and insisting on being referred to as Mr Tiddles, or Chewbacca, even by the teacher.
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Did you read that link FA?
- Genesis Croix de Fer
- Dolan Tuono0 -
No I spoke to a friend who has a child in a school, with furries who do this.
In fairness, it's not full on onesie and mask, but they are allowed to wear cat ears in class, as a variation of the uniform code.
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Read it now. It says the same thing about them as other one I read.
What don't I seem to be understanding? The part about it being a problem if it gets a bit obsessive, and kids identify as animals in school, down the shops, etc? No, I think I got that part.
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"our online safety experts were unable to substantiate any reports being made about this behaviour in schools or claims that mentioned students considering themselves to be Furries."
- Genesis Croix de Fer
- Dolan Tuono0 -
I'll pass on our friend's number, then.
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OMG you actually believe her.
1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
Not entirely, but children are certainly expressing their individuality in school with animal related clothing. As Brian says, it's basically cosplay, but with the usual wokey requirement to respect the child's feelings, from what we can tell from our friend. Rather than saying take those stupid ear warmers off young lady.
If you take your literal head off for once, you'll pick up from my posts that it's no different than goths or whatever, when we were young.
The difference, potentially, is that the kids with in-groups that required wholesale reinterpretation of the uniform would get a bollocking in my school. Less clear if matida's right to identify as a cat is these days given undue respect or not. I am guessing it depends on the school. Or the teacher, or Matilda's parents. if deferring to a cat identity leads to a quieter life.
I also doubt doubt that a subtle pair of cat ear warmers will be seized upon for urine extraction purposes for ever more.
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This is an amazing premise for an article :
An article attacking speeding cyclists, wholly based on not realising that there are virtual rides on Strava.
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Or that some will likely be glitchy GPS records
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Had a little look at the top rides with that segment on - they all manage to never come to a stop, and all do two weird u-turns in Vauxhall.
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(Plus there's something wrong with the way whatever system does that virtual ride that messes up that segment.)
Anyway, that ride did not happen, and even in the virtual world, it wasn't going that fast.
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I think you'd have a lot less time for MissSnuffy's confected bullshit if you had daily experience of any school. Uniform rules are pretty rigourously enforced. Sure people attach keyrings to their bags and pin badges on their blazers but to give you a flavour we have just had a message to say that my daughters' school will be cracking down on ornamentation of school lanyards. Children aren't wearing ear warmers other than outside at break time. And it's hardly an insight that teenagers like to push at boundaries by seeing how far they can bend the rules without getting a detention *every* night (one or two give a certain amount of credibility).
"Subtle pair of cat ear warmers"? Are you serious?
1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
I feel like you are quibbling over a detail. There's a lot of cyclists that go too fast. Sometimes I feel that it is a minority that actually cycle safely.
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There's a large difference between going a bit too fast, and going at 50mph though
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Depends on the point you want to make.
Are there cyclists going fast enough that they can seriously injure people? Yes.
Are they doing 50 mph? Probably not on the flat.
Should cyclists be prosecuted if they kill someone by riding dangerously? Yes.
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15mph is fast enough to seriously injure people. 10mph will do it if you are unlucky.
1985 Mercian King of Mercia - work in progress (Hah! Who am I kidding?)
Pinnacle Monzonite
Part of the anti-growth coalition0 -
At the same speed, is a bike likely to cause more damage than a car, due to smaller contact point?
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2020 Voodoo Marasa
2017 Cube Attain GTC Pro Disc 2016
2016 Voodoo Wazoo0 -
And? I don't ride 15mph+ anywhere near any pedestrians. I don't want to seriously injure someone or myself.
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