I suppose no one thought of trying the “just don’t put it in your trolley” option, huh?https://twitter.com/telegraph/status/1002801826692042752 …
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When mass poverty and safe playing areas stopped.
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Rich people used to say 'No' too or their children's nannies certainly did. cf Mary Poppins!
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My Mum said "no" a lot to me in supermarkets. I just accepted it because I was bought up properly...
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It explains why so many younger people, today, fall apart when thing don't go their way. It's a novel experience to them.
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We've taught them all about their rights but not their responsibilities. It shows.
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.... & a prizes for everyone, mentality.
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They stopped saying no when, thanks to capitalism, they could afford to say yes.
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Education, or lack of it and cultural norms changed. Women were also forced out to work so they didn't have the same time to cook or to control their children.
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Kitchen gizmos can help there. I use a chip-maker to cut my tomatoes before mashing them and a vegetable spiraliser to shred my onions for my home-made pasta sauce.
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If you go on like that, you will lose all your teeth. Get some fibre and bones into you man!
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Well I had steamed carrots and broccoli last night, together with butter-fried spiralised potatoes. And fish. It's not all pasta.
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It's all wet and floppy by the sound of it, a bit like food in a genteel seaside hotel in a novel by Elizabeth Taylor, but I digress
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Can't you get arrested for saying no to your kids?
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