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> I'm calling into question the idea that modern treatment of children is responsible for the world we live in.

> They're replying to someone with the obvious implication that this program is in some way critical to children "learning and becoming productive members of society."

They were not saying it's "critical" or that the specific treatment of children is responsible for anything.

It was a very simple argument that everyone should care about children growing up well because we need them.

> Does this career have the effect of increasing the number of children they care for in exchange for greater profits?

This doesn't make any sense. I understand your incentive argument but what is Big Lunch going to do, make pro-birthrate propaganda? We're already sending children to schools and expecting them to eat the school lunch by default. It doesn't matter who pays as long as the school has motivation to reduce costs.

> The tragedy here being that schools consider their primary obligation to the child and not to the family. So when parents are in a situation where they cannot care for their children successfully, for whatever reason, we completely ignore the core problem and instead patch over it.

It would cost so so much more to do that, and while I agree that it would be good, fixing poverty is super far outside the scope of a school's job.

> Worse it can sometimes create negative stigma for the child and work to further destabilize their living situation.

This is an argument for giving all students free meals. No stigma.



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