Chestnut
NotTooOld I guess there will be lots of advice on how to save money, and that might not be a bad thing. Many younger people have no idea how to economise and probably spend on luxuries thinking they are essentials. Their very first priority should be to feed and clothe their children, so I get very angry when I hear of children being sent to school hungry with no breakfast, that is pure laziness. It costs next to nothing to fill your child up with a bowl of porridge and that should be more important than anything.
Very judgemental. As a teacher who has worked in deprived areas, I can say categorically, that children who are hungry don't have parents frittering money away. They're existing hand to mouth on universal credit, in areas where industry was decimated in the 1980s. A lot of their food comes from food banks and clothes from charity shops or second hand school uniform. They frequently live in homes we would regard as uninhabitable, with problems such as damp and vermin infestations, which the landlord doesn't rectify, often even when it's local authority housing (which is often unavailable due to council property being sold off) and the level of demand.
Making inflammatory statements like that either show ignorance of the poverty many families live in today, or is a deliberate wind up.