The little Inn by the wayside

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Chroelle
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Chroelle »

We have a rather fun debate at work currently. The kids are all using these "scooters" (so wrongfully named - but its the ones where you propel yourself forward standing on it with one leg and using the other on the ground).
Image

Well some years ago when they started coming to our school, the kdis were alle slowly speeding along with no real danger to themselves or others. We had a policy back then that if kids used rollerskates on the school they were only permitted to if they wore helmets. We even said that rollerskates was only on special occasions because they got so much speed built that when they hit other non-skaters both got hurt - so helmets only helped the ones that actually wore the skates.
We also have a policy that kids cannot climb in trees in our institution because we haven't got the manpower to keep an eye on the many places we have trees on the playground (this is my boss' rule - and he cannot be budged on it - he has heard to much of kids getting strangled in trees in institutions). The kids of course still climb the trees whenever the staff has passed them, so the rule is sort of half-assed.

Now comes the good part. Now the kids are getting so good at using the scooters that they get high speeds in them and jump around doing slides, grinds jumps etc. They generally throw these metal sword-wannabee-playtoys around hitting everything from kids and adults shins, windows, woodwork and everything in between. We still have no rule that they should use helmets because we have a rule saying that they are allowed to use the scooters on the playground (leftover rule from back when things were slower) but they are not allowed to use helmets on the playground because ... IF they decide to climb trees which they are not allowed to, they might get strangled. Talk about bureacracy. :)
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Zyx »

So, what happened today was that with a couple of friends we launched late last night a site that shows how much your tax payments pay for certain activities like police, child care etc. Today the main daily newspaper in Finland called my friend and they wrote an article about us.

So. It's like the best day ever or, like, something.

edit: so, we made, like, made it to the largest afternoon paper's website as well. oops.

edit2: so, well, my friend is being interviewed by the finnish broadcasting company's radio program. like right now.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Pater Alf »

eMTe wrote:Btw, I dont have particular interest in putting cat among pigeons, but isnt this whole leftist bullshit coming, partially, from your part of the world, to name it, Scandinavia? :ninja:
I might be wrong, but isn't that extreme kind of protection more a thing of conservative and rightist people than of leftist? Judging from my experiences leftists normally tend to give kids responsibility and let them make their own decisions. Rightists on the other hand tend to make rules and norms for everything.
Going back in history anti-authoritarian education and laissez-faire for example are very left ideas.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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The only thing I know the extreme left wants to abolish is going to prostitutes. Both for kids and adults. :p
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by eMTe »

Pater Alf wrote:I might be wrong, but isn't that extreme kind of protection more a thing of conservative and rightist people than of leftist? Judging from my experiences leftists normally tend to give kids responsibility and let them make their own decisions. Rightists on the other hand tend to make rules and norms for everything.
You're wrong. There's nothing more overprotective about child in this world than leftist turned parent. 8)
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Pater Alf »

Ok, I don't think we agree here. But maybe we are both wrong and it doesn't have to do anything with political views, but is a problem of modern societies with a decreasing number of children and not enough vital problems to care about.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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As for vital problems you reminded me that I had promised to add Open Sonic. I still cant play it though and I feel reserved about writing about games that I only vaguely remember.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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Chroelle wrote:Now comes the good part. Now the kids are getting so good at using the scooters that they get high speeds in them and jump around doing slides, grinds jumps etc. They generally throw these metal sword-wannabee-playtoys around hitting everything from kids and adults shins, windows, woodwork and everything in between. We still have no rule that they should use helmets because we have a rule saying that they are allowed to use the scooters on the playground (leftover rule from back when things were slower) but they are not allowed to use helmets on the playground because ... IF they decide to climb trees which they are not allowed to, they might get strangled. Talk about bureacracy. :)

I think I would classify that as a kunundrum or a paradox...you're damned if you do, you're damned if you don't...but then again, sounds like any standard form of government regulation that I ever heard of...
Might as well just let them try and do tricks out of the trees on their scooters...could be good, could be bad...although I would assume climbing a tree is when you would need a helmet...gah, too much thinking before bed = not good.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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Zyx wrote:So, what happened today was that with a couple of friends we launched late last night a site that shows how much your tax payments pay for certain activities like police, child care etc. Today the main daily newspaper in Finland called my friend and they wrote an article about us.

So. It's like the best day ever or, like, something.

edit: so, we made, like, made it to the largest afternoon paper's website as well. oops.

edit2: so, well, my friend is being interviewed by the finnish broadcasting company's radio program. like right now.
AMAZING! Can we get a link? Or is it in Finnish (soumi or the swedish-kind (I just pissed of Zyx there I believe)) so I shouldn't bother to look at it. :)
Was it easily done (I am guessing no)? I am thinking that perhaps it could be done in Danish as well. :)
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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Chroelle wrote:AMAZING! Can we get a link? Or is it in Finnish (soumi or the swedish-kind (I just pissed of Zyx there I believe)) so I shouldn't bother to look at it. :)
Was it easily done (I am guessing no)? I am thinking that perhaps it could be done in Danish as well. :)
Swedish-kind? Soumi? :shock:

But yeah, it's in Finnish: Verokuitti. Well, it's quite simple, it has the same idea as Where Does My Money Go (which I didn't know existed prior to us doing our thing).
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Chroelle »

It looks pretty cool. Google translate helped me alot to understand. :)
As far as I know about Finnish language (which goes litlle beyond Yksi, Kaksi Kolme) there was a more swedish sounding Finnish in part of Finland, while in Suomi (sorry for the typo before) Finland, the Finnish is nothing like that and closer to a Russian sound. Am I way off? I didn't do my research on this one properly. :)
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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Chroelle wrote:It looks pretty cool. Google translate helped me alot to understand. :)
:D
As far as I know about Finnish language (which goes litlle beyond Yksi, Kaksi Kolme) there was a more swedish sounding Finnish in part of Finland, while in Suomi (sorry for the typo before) Finland, the Finnish is nothing like that and closer to a Russian sound. Am I way off? I didn't do my research on this one properly. :)
I find it odd that people from Scandinavian countries find that some parts of Finland speak "swedish sounding Finnish" when it is in fact Swedish :D (with different accent and some words than the Swedish 'rikssvenskan'). Finnish itself has nothing to do with either Swedish or Russian, and is closer to Estonian and ancient Hungarian. We're bilingual like the Canadians. Och samma på svenska.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Chroelle »

I knew about the Estonian actually, but simply forgot. But I might have to go to Finland myself some day and experience the Finnish tongue.

But you speak both Finnish and Swedish fluently then? Which would you consider your mothertongue (both?). I know that Maz was/is able to speak both, but I am not sure if that goes for everyone though.
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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Chroelle wrote:But you speak both Finnish and Swedish fluently then? Which would you consider your mothertongue (both?). I know that Maz was/is able to speak both, but I am not sure if that goes for everyone though.
We learn both in school, but because there's very little you need to use swedish, it's really rusty. Also, I get it mixed with german all the time. The mother tongue is finnish for most except for the tiny minority of finnish-swedish people, to whom I do not belong to. The finnish-swedish guys I know mostly use finnish. There are a lot of people who couldn't speak swedish to save their lives and a handful who can't speak finnish at all, only swedish.

We got some feedback on our site in Swedish. =)
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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Zyx wrote:I find it odd that people from Scandinavian countries find that some parts of Finland speak "swedish sounding Finnish" when it is in fact Swedish :D (with different accent and some words than the Swedish 'rikssvenskan'). Finnish itself has nothing to do with either Swedish or Russian, and is closer to Estonian and ancient Hungarian. We're bilingual like the Canadians. Och samma på svenska.
I did not know any of that. I learn something new everyday here...
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by eMTe »

Pager wrote:any of that
You didnt know Canadians are bilingual? :mrgreen:
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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We're bilingual? What are you talking aboot? :P
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by eMTe »

To say something optimistic I have ladybird plague in my flat, which is of course, great. There are several spotted friends flying happily around my room for many days and I almost started to feel sorry that they'll die someday. Anybody knows how long ladybirds live?
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

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eMTe wrote:Anybody knows how long ladybirds live?
No, but I imagine to the Manbirds they never seem to stop screeching...
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Re: The little Inn by the wayside

Post by Chroelle »

eMTe wrote: Anybody knows how long ladybirds live?
Zyx tends to do this to me when I ask stuff, so here goes:

http://lmgtfy.com/?q=ladybirds+lifespan
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