Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Mother defends son's right to wear a tutu after being confronted by stranger in park [View all]LittleDuckie
(42 posts)71. At least she's not claiming that wanting to wear a tutu
means that he's really a girl inside & making him pretend to be one. That would be some real child abuse.
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
156 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
Mother defends son's right to wear a tutu after being confronted by stranger in park [View all]
davidn3600
Sep 2016
OP
I would have taken his picture and then yelled "Hey this pervert is taking pictures of my kid!" to
TeamPooka
Sep 2016
#45
I am not defending bullying, but if a mother dresses a child in a way that will likely cause the
Doodley
Sep 2016
#13
But a three year old boy could see a tutu in a store and say: "I want to wear THAT!"
pnwmom
Sep 2016
#74
you would be surprised what a bright 3 or 4 year old can say. I raised 2 very
demigoddess
Sep 2016
#86
And the three-year-old who says "boys can't wear that!" isn't repeating what s/he has been told?
Brickbat
Sep 2016
#144
I am talking about people who are intolerant of others because they are different.
Doodley
Sep 2016
#61
we may then conclude that a minority should not express surprise or disbelief when confronted
LanternWaste
Sep 2016
#130
Don't be surprised when someone tells a child they're being abused for wearing a tutu?
Brickbat
Sep 2016
#12
As a Southerner: no one would ever say that to a little boy wearing a tutu
obamanut2012
Sep 2016
#138
I personally have no issue with what the kid wears, but let's get real. We live in a very bigoted
Doodley
Sep 2016
#16
I see it as possibly a kind of Munchausen by Proxy. She is getting a lot of attention from this.
Doodley
Sep 2016
#32
Are you equally supportive of mothers who dress their 3-year-old girls to look and act like whores
BlueStreak
Sep 2016
#51
I am sorry if I have come across that way. I was bullied as a kid and know what it feels like
Doodley
Sep 2016
#70
I never said they were wrong. I have posted that I personally have no problem at all
Doodley
Sep 2016
#98
A toddler playing dressup and a toddler being pushed into a beauty pagent are different.
haele
Sep 2016
#140
Have you even seen any evidence that this "person" was real? Were there other witnesses? Were there
Doodley
Sep 2016
#42
No, I didn't say she made it up. I said I was open minded to that possibility. Her stunning photo
Doodley
Sep 2016
#50
My youngest did the same thing. But we aren't getting 15 minutes of fame off the back of it.
Doodley
Sep 2016
#52
When our girls were little, say 4 and 1, my friend would often bring her boys, then 5 and 2, over to
phylny
Sep 2016
#117
I have reported your abusive post. I have never said, thought or written anything
Doodley
Sep 2016
#76
It might be somewhere up thread of where he says he "doesn't let his daughter dress like a tart"
Hassin Bin Sober
Sep 2016
#90
So, I assume you don't agree with me when I say I don't care what the kid wears, we live in a nation
Doodley
Sep 2016
#41
the same thing they say about rape victims. Well you dressed like that, what do you expect?
TeamPooka
Sep 2016
#47
wow. . . just. . . .wow. . . do you actually think that what that interfering, asshole "adult"
niyad
Sep 2016
#80
Of course I don't think it is okay. Did I ever say it was? Your misplaced indignation is offensive.
Doodley
Sep 2016
#83
I have revised my first post on this thread to be clear. Why assume the worst in fellow DUers?
Doodley
Sep 2016
#93
in case you have not yet figured it out, not everybody who posts on du actually adheres to du
niyad
Sep 2016
#99
I am learning that. Being called a troll simply for expressing concern, or being called
Doodley
Sep 2016
#111
You do realize you are enforcing and enabling this bullying attitude, right?
obamanut2012
Sep 2016
#136
Ok... I guess I've got to be the one who asks..... Why dress your 3 year old son in a tutu? nt
clarice
Sep 2016
#8
Oh my god. I just took my 4 year old nephew to the Museum of Science and Industry.
Hassin Bin Sober
Sep 2016
#100
That looks like an outfit my granddaughter might wear -- and get mistaken for a boy.
pnwmom
Sep 2016
#36
If you're getting into a subjective topic of discussion, and expecting to change minds
The2ndWheel
Sep 2016
#78
in other word, we are to live our lives in fear of what other people, narrow-minded, bigoted,
niyad
Sep 2016
#84
where on earth do you get the idea that I do not know that they are there? believe me,
niyad
Sep 2016
#131
Yep. Most normal adults realize that very small children live in their own fantasy world.
prayin4rain
Sep 2016
#119
hmmm, could she have had him arrested for approaching her son without her permission,
niyad
Sep 2016
#77
I can't believe anyone here is actually siding w/the shitwit who started yelling at a stranger's kid
Warren DeMontague
Sep 2016
#121