FailedNormieManlet
NTmaxxed pajeet
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2021
- Posts
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I teach some real fucking retard kids, a lot of them won't pass their GCSEs and even more will never go to university. The bottom percentage of my students cannot even read a normal clock, they only understand digital. An even larger proportion of students can't even spell properly because of auto-correct.
Consider this.
If you pass school, go to uni and get a decent degree, you're already more educated than 50% of the population. If you pass GCSE maths and english, you already mog a large proportion of people. 1/3 of students failed to pass GCSE English and Maths in 2019. That number has roughly stayed the same in 2022. That's a shocking number if you think about it, 1/3 of the youth/young population failed to even pass basic english and maths?!
If you can do the bare minimum and pass those exams, you're already doing well in life. Now if we think about it, when you go clubbing or even go to a bar and find it hard to relate to some of the braindead fucks on the dancefloor, a lot of those people probably never passed their GCSEs.
Now lets get down to parenting. If you grew up with both parents in a relatively stable family, you are very lucky. Throughout human history raising of children has been a group effort, with the entire family taking part (this sort of parenting is still seen in parts of asia like bangladesh and india), the nuclear family is also relatively new however it is stable. But the underlying point is, throughout history raising children has been a group effort and not a task delegated to a single person.
It's only now that we have single parent households which are a totally un-natural and unhealthy arrangement riddled with a myriad of issues ranging from the social, psychological and the economic.
If you were able to have the luxury of being raised in a stable household, just know you were given something which 22% of the population lack. Yes 22% of the population live in single parent households.
Now think about this for a second.
Consider this.
If you pass school, go to uni and get a decent degree, you're already more educated than 50% of the population. If you pass GCSE maths and english, you already mog a large proportion of people. 1/3 of students failed to pass GCSE English and Maths in 2019. That number has roughly stayed the same in 2022. That's a shocking number if you think about it, 1/3 of the youth/young population failed to even pass basic english and maths?!
If you can do the bare minimum and pass those exams, you're already doing well in life. Now if we think about it, when you go clubbing or even go to a bar and find it hard to relate to some of the braindead fucks on the dancefloor, a lot of those people probably never passed their GCSEs.
Now lets get down to parenting. If you grew up with both parents in a relatively stable family, you are very lucky. Throughout human history raising of children has been a group effort, with the entire family taking part (this sort of parenting is still seen in parts of asia like bangladesh and india), the nuclear family is also relatively new however it is stable. But the underlying point is, throughout history raising children has been a group effort and not a task delegated to a single person.
It's only now that we have single parent households which are a totally un-natural and unhealthy arrangement riddled with a myriad of issues ranging from the social, psychological and the economic.
If you were able to have the luxury of being raised in a stable household, just know you were given something which 22% of the population lack. Yes 22% of the population live in single parent households.
Now think about this for a second.
- Passing your exams
- Getting a degree
- Owning a car
- Growing up in a 2 parent household