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Unkotare

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The day after the election and almost no talk about it at school. The most I've heard was a "didja vote?" here and there. For the most part, people still adhere to the "no politics, no religion" rule of casual talk. A few students didn't know about the election results (and were surprised at them), and many didn't even realize we had an election yesterday. The most talked about feature of the election has been the ballot initiative removing the MCAS as a graduation requirement. Of course the students were happy about that.
 
The day after the election and almost no talk about it at school. The most I've heard was a "didja vote?" here and there. For the most part, people still adhere to the "no politics, no religion" rule of casual talk. A few students didn't know about the election results (and were surprised at them), and many didn't even realize we had an election yesterday. The most talked about feature of the election has been the ballot initiative removing the MCAS as a graduation requirement. Of course the students were happy about that.
I find that surprising, but I'm seventy, no kids or even grandkids in high school.
What about you? Are you surprised or at all stunned by the lack of reaction? Does it mean anything, or just kids being kids?
 
I find that surprising, but I'm seventy, no kids or even grandkids in high school.
What about you? Are you surprised or at all stunned by the lack of reaction? Does it mean anything, or just kids being kids?

Not surprising, really.
 
Youngins wouldn't get excited about geriatrics in office. Too far removed.
 
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