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Julie in Austin

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Posts posted by Julie in Austin

  1. So my 9yo did Pet Store Math and loved, loved, loved running his virtual pet store. He's now asking for something similar that does "all of life" -- insurance, rent/mortgage, groceries, etc. Does something like this exist? Ideally not just workbook lessons (although a workbook is OK) but something that has you run a virtual life, be responsible for your decisions, etc.?

     

    Thanks!

  2. I never see movies, but there was so much praise for this we went. I loved it. Spoilers in white below.

     

    There was so much suspense. Literally until the last minute, I thought it was possible that she could die--I wouldn't have been surprised if some tribal leader saw her in the sand and shot her.

  3. I don't know if my experience was typical, but even in an AP American History class,  World War II meant Pearl Harbor, the Holocaust, US internment camps, and nuclear weapons, and that's it.  I had no idea whatsoever about Britain's experience in WWII until I was an adult and started reading on my own.  

  4. But the "basic American spectrum" does contain rather extreme views as well that are not much better than Fascism: racism for example, or hatred towards gays, or the belief that women are inferior to men. I would imagine it to be very difficult if partners had opposite views in this respect.

     

     

    I guess I don't consider outright racism, for example, to be part of the American political spectrum. You can disagree about issues such as affirmative action, immigration, reforming inner-city education, etc., without being a racist. I would think you'd need a party or group saying, "We support X because those people are genetically inferior" before I'd consider racism part of the political spectrum. (Which is not to say that there are not racists in American politics.)

  5. I started seeing someone last year.

    After a few weeks he, with a few drinks, came out with a statement re: Hitler and his 'failure to finish'.

     

     

     

    :confused1:

     

    Uh . . . just to clarify . . . my statement about easily living with political differences does not apply to that. I was thinking in terms of the basic American political spectrum, from Tea Party to Progressive, or however you want to label it.

  6. I think it depends on what kind of political beliefs you told. Dh and I are opposites and do just fine. (Actually, I'd feel impoverished without the interesting discussions. There's no spouting platitudes and getting away with it in this house--if you make a political statement, you better be prepared to defend it!) But neither of us is really 'partisan' in the sense of focusing on personalities or party loyalty. If you tend to view political issues as a continuum (such as: a continuum between protecting the environment at any cost to the economy sliding all the way to protecting the economy at any cost to the environment, with people arrayed at different points along that continuum), you can be just fine in a "mixed marriage."

  7. I also had an 8yo still having trouble with the 'r' sound. I consulted with a friend who is a speech therapist and she suggested that we take the online class that a speech therapist would take to learn to help people with the 'r' sound from northernspeech.com. We did that (it was $24) and began working with our son. We're about half-way through and he is about half-way better, so I am feeling good about this decision so far.

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