Diamondeye wrote:
No one said families should not celebrate graduations, just like they celebrate weddings and anniversaries. Moreover, retirement is vastly more of an accomplishment than graduation just becuase of the stage of life it takes place at, and all the things besides work one gets through in the intervening years.
From a societal standpoint, the view you seem to take with the rest of your post, a retirement is an old duffer getting out of the way, should be celebrated, but is not, IMO, as big an accomplishment as the young man coming of age, exiting his parents care, and entering the real world. Which, really, is what graduation is to a large...
degree.
Quote:
If a graduate is a member of your family or a friend, yes, you should celebrate. If it's anyone else, why would you give a ****?
Sure. But I would think a high school teacher, talking to his students, should give somewhat of a ****. Sorry, dude's a dick.