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During the week of the big snow storm, 2 teachers from NE Ohio were in DC with some of their high school students, (along with 100 other students and teachers from other states).
They were at the White House the Tuesday of the snow storm and were scheduled to be there only until 2PM.
But the students got an unplanned for surprise, they were invited to a concert to be held later in the day in the East Room at the WH.(it made sense that because the majority of the invited guests were not going to be able to attend due to the storm, the students would help fill the room).
Later in the day the teachers and students walked back to the WH and stood in line outside in blizzard conditions for nearly 1/2 hour before going inside and through security.
As I heard the story directly from one of the teachers, the high school students were extremely excited and extremely well behaved. The teachers were very very proud of them.
Once inside the WH and past security the teachers and students waited to file into the East Room but were pulled aside and a told to wait. The teachers worried there was a problem. But there wasn't. Instead their students were given the honor of sitting in the front row along with the families of the President and the VP. (The teachers sat in rows behind the students). This was arranged by one of the concert producers not a staff person at the WH.
The teacher who told me the story told me how they got very excited for their students and gestured in disbelief with pleasure at the coveted seats when Desiree Rogers appeared and immediately and verbally dressed the teachers down and warned them that their behavior boarded on being "greedy". The teachers were stunned at how their joy could have been interpreted by Ms. Rogers in such a negative way.
This is a tiny story with a huge moral. The moral to this story is that if Ms. Rogers needed to make her presence known by throwing her "important" weight around at a small insignificant time, it is good she is going because she does not belong in the people's house.
It is also insightful to the dynamic of the vibe of Ms. Rogers. I think she craved the spotlight and loved the attention.
However my guess is that she would not have treated bigwigs the way she did the teachers.
I hold the belief that our character is how we behave when no one is looking.
Good-bye Ms. Rogers, I hope the new Social Secretary is more social and less socialite.
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