ll Nebur ll
I heard an atrocious story today at school. A teacher went to see the Hunger Games movie and didn't read the books. She had the nerve to march up to school and protest against the book. She wanted the books banned from the school. She not only did that, but she found the kids in her class that liked the book and made them tell her what they liked about it and then she got her unprofessional a** up and argued with them about.
What the ******** is that? I'm like b***h, read the books.
the problem is, is that when your so caught up in finding something negative about a movie or a book, you spend the whole time searching for that vulnerable spot and then disregard all the other AMAZING parts of it. sure, the hunger games has kids killing each other, but it has strong characters, life lessons, understandable relationships that are appealing to teens, and a very likable plot. of course, the teacher didn't see that - she just saw the few scenes when one kid is killing the other. forgetting they're paid actors, and the book is fictional, and million of kids/teens/adults are reading it and loving for a deeper reason.
and women pleeeaassee, she's attacking a book she has never read and trying to get it banned.
I would pay to see this insane women in court. she'd be be presented as a witness and the judge would ask if she saw something, and she would say, "Well, I didn't actually see it. But my friend told me there was a man in a hood, and I thought that was suspicious."
Life lesson: just because teacher's teach, doesn't mean they're genius's.