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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 3/13/2011 Posts: 388
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Quote:Students at a Catholic high school in south Ottawa are protesting a dress code that requires a long shirt be worn with form-fitting yoga pants. The pants are popular among girls at St. Joseph's High School in Barrhaven and they are not happy about the requirement that carries the threat of suspension.
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"Everyone's like, the school's so lame I want to move out. Like, it's bad," said Crystal Gomes, who joined about 300 other students in signing a petition protesting the requirement. "Everyone's just going to wear it anyway to see if the school's going to suspend us anyway," another girl told CBC News.
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"I'm pretty angry about it because I'm one of the girls that wears Lulus every single day," Devenz said. "They already banned ripped jeans, skinny jeans and jeggings, so I was pretty upset because that kills my whole wardrobe." SourceThis is what results of a lax dress code. Students no longer go to school to learn, but to show off and sex it up. Education has been buried by a generation of juvenile and sluttish behaviour. We still have a chance to stop this before it becomes too late.  Unisex. Baggy. Absolutely no alteration allowed. Dress code violations will be punished severely. Or these BDUs 
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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 11/13/2011 Posts: 347
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Rank: Student Body Vice-President
Joined: 1/4/2011 Posts: 782
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I go to a school with uniform...but idgaf because what you wear has no relation with what kind of student you are Also, lol @ North Korea Waterloo Mechanical Engineering '17 Applied: McGill :) :( :( :( Western :) Ivey :( U of T :) :) Waterloo :) :) :)
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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 3/13/2011 Posts: 388
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I'm being completely serious here. Let me put aside the mask of satire and present a more reasonable solution:  A uniform serves the purpose of making the opposite sex look as unappealing as possible, thus removing sexual relationships as a stumbling block to the education of the country's youth. It also ensures that students going to and from school will not engage in illicit behaviour, as the uniforms will help age and identify them. The west is crumbling under top-heavy social infrastructure and the loss of bread-and-butter industries, and the only way to turn this around is if we nurture a productive future work force, that seeks to create rather than to demand. School must be reformed to be a place of learning, nothing else. The Chinese, Indians, and Brazilians are doing it, and look where they are now. In 20 years they will be the First world, and North America will turn into the worst of Socialist Europe. By the way, Fred? That Ad Hominem attack of yours is baseless and just serves to show that you are an example of what's wrong with youth today.
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 12/22/2010 Posts: 80
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LRooke wrote:A uniform serves the purpose of making the opposite sex look as unappealing as possible, thus removing sexual relationships as a stumbling block to the education of the country's youth. Yup. You're definitely right about that.
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Rank: Student Body Vice-President  Joined: 11/28/2010 Posts: 820
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I went to a school with a uniform. It was hideous, uncomfortable, we all hated it, and people still had sexual/romantic relationships lol. I agree that putting limits on skankiness may be a good idea (no jeggings/leggings except with long shirts, no skirts shorter than/pants lower than _____ etc.) but uniforms? nah. University of Toronto (Trinity College) Honours Bachelor of Arts, Majors in English and Psychology, 2013ish
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Rank: Frosh  Joined: 11/29/2010 Posts: 24
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Banning girls from wearing tight pants that shows off their butts? Tsk what has the world come to? *Insert awesome quote from somebody famous*
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 6/29/2011 Posts: 292
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LRooke wrote:Students no longer go to school to learn, but to show off and sex it up. Education has been buried by a generation of juvenile and sluttish behaviour. How is this any different than it's ever been? People always tend to think that the newest generation of teenagers is so much worse than the last. If anything I'd say our generation is more serious about academics than any generation in the last 50 years at least. Queen's Arts '16 Chancellor's Scholarship Recipient
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 4/16/2011 Posts: 240
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I've worn uniform my whole school life, even in 6th form (year 12/13) we had to wear black/grey suit and tie. It has it's ups and downs, but (perhaps because I've always done it) I've never seen it as a negative thing at all, most people can't dress themselves for sh*t anyway. McGill - Arts
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Rank: Frosh  Joined: 12/11/2011 Posts: 22
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I've had experience wearing uniforms as well as going to school in regular attire. Uniforms are not as unappealing as everyone thinks however, the ones that you posted are appalling. University of Western Ontario 2015 BMOS + AEO
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Rank: Frosh
Joined: 2/18/2011 Posts: 24
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LRooke wrote:I'm being completely serious here. Let me put aside the mask of satire and present a more reasonable solution:  A uniform serves the purpose of making the opposite sex look as unappealing as possible, thus removing sexual relationships as a stumbling block to the education of the country's youth. It also ensures that students going to and from school will not engage in illicit behaviour, as the uniforms will help age and identify them. The west is crumbling under top-heavy social infrastructure and the loss of bread-and-butter industries, and the only way to turn this around is if we nurture a productive future work force, that seeks to create rather than to demand. School must be reformed to be a place of learning, nothing else. The Chinese, Indians, and Brazilians are doing it, and look where they are now. In 20 years they will be the First world, and North America will turn into the worst of Socialist Europe. By the way, Fred? That Ad Hominem attack of yours is baseless and just serves to show that you are an example of what's wrong with youth today. Uniforms won't suddenly turn the productive tide to us back from the BRIC. The Chinese are growing because everyone there is so poor in the first place and they study all it's game day. Canada's population and aspirations are markedly lower than China's. We seek a stable and equitable way of life where everyone has a decent chance of success and prosperity, much like the Socialist Europeans countries that have a higher quality of life than any of the BRIC have now or will ever have.
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Rank: Senior Student
Joined: 1/25/2011 Posts: 75
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Are you kidding?
lol, no, people can wear what they want when they want.
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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 3/13/2011 Posts: 388
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mhz wrote:Are you kidding?
lol, no, people can wear what they want when they want. Nope, no you can't. Walk down the main artery of your town or city in a full gimp costume. You won't get very far. Might as well start inculcating that value in kids.
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 12/12/2011 Posts: 54
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LRooke wrote: This is what results of a lax dress code. Students no longer go to school to learn, but to show off and sex it up. Education has been buried by a generation of juvenile and sluttish behaviour.
Your assumption that students (or more likely female students as you have seemingly alluded to) go to school for the purpose of 'showing off' and 'sexing it up' is flawed. The vast majority of students go to school to learn so that once they graduate they can pursue whatever career they want to pursue. There are students who are far more interested in sex then school, but this is a psychological issue and not a material (clothing) issue. These students are also much fewer then you make them out to be. I begin to wonder whether you are making a misogynist generalization on female students by indirectly stating that women need to have their sexuality controlled as it will consume their academic career. By the same token you are stating that men cannot learn in environments where a or many female students are wearing clothing that is sexually appealing to them as thinking about sex will take precedence over academics. As another poster brought up their are uniform fetishists in schools who would prefer a uniform policy as far as sex appeal goes. Personally if one can't concentrate on school because the student next to you looks sexy then one must mature or consult a psychiatrist. APPLIED TO: University of Toronto (Political Science) - ACCEPTED York (Political Science) - ACCEPTED Ryerson (Politics and Governance) - ACCEPTED
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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 3/13/2011 Posts: 388
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petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote: This is what results of a lax dress code. Students no longer go to school to learn, but to show off and sex it up. Education has been buried by a generation of juvenile and sluttish behaviour.
Your assumption that students (or more likely female students as you have seemingly alluded to) go to school for the purpose of 'showing off' and 'sexing it up' is flawed. The vast majority of students go to school to learn so that once they graduate they can pursue whatever career they want to pursue. There are students who are far more interested in sex then school, but this is a psychological issue and not a material (clothing) issue. These students are also much fewer then you make them out to be. I begin to wonder whether you are making a misogynist generalization on female students by indirectly stating that women need to have their sexuality controlled as it will consume their academic career. By the same token you are stating that men cannot learn in environments where a or many female students are wearing clothing that is sexually appealing to them as thinking about sex will take precedence over academics. As another poster brought up their are uniform fetishists in schools who would prefer a uniform policy as far as sex appeal goes. Personally if one can't concentrate on school because the student next to you looks sexy then one must mature or consult a psychiatrist. They simply have to be conditioned to accept mainstream behaviour.
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 12/12/2011 Posts: 54
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LRooke wrote: They simply have to be conditioned to accept mainstream behaviour.
The question then is 'What is mainstream behaviour?' as it varies culture to culture, time to time and person to person. APPLIED TO: University of Toronto (Political Science) - ACCEPTED York (Political Science) - ACCEPTED Ryerson (Politics and Governance) - ACCEPTED
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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 3/13/2011 Posts: 388
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petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote: They simply have to be conditioned to accept mainstream behaviour.
The question then is 'What is mainstream behaviour?' as it varies culture to culture, time to time and person to person. The government shall define it.
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 12/12/2011 Posts: 54
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LRooke wrote:petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote: They simply have to be conditioned to accept mainstream behaviour.
The question then is 'What is mainstream behaviour?' as it varies culture to culture, time to time and person to person. The government shall define it. Then what mechanism(s) does the government use to define mainstream behavior? APPLIED TO: University of Toronto (Political Science) - ACCEPTED York (Political Science) - ACCEPTED Ryerson (Politics and Governance) - ACCEPTED
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Rank: Student Council
Joined: 3/13/2011 Posts: 388
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petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote:petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote: They simply have to be conditioned to accept mainstream behaviour.
The question then is 'What is mainstream behaviour?' as it varies culture to culture, time to time and person to person. The government shall define it. Then what mechanism(s) does the government use to define mainstream behavior? By what the regime in charge deems best. Uniforms are only a part of the social changes that my 'ideal' regime would seek to execute. Perhaps government is the wrong word to use. I mean autocracy.
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Rank: Senior Student  Joined: 12/12/2011 Posts: 54
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LRooke wrote:petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote:petarpoparacrni wrote:LRooke wrote: They simply have to be conditioned to accept mainstream behaviour.
The question then is 'What is mainstream behaviour?' as it varies culture to culture, time to time and person to person. The government shall define it. Then what mechanism(s) does the government use to define mainstream behavior? By what the regime in charge deems best. Uniforms are only a part of the social changes that my 'ideal' regime would seek to execute. Perhaps government is the wrong word to use. I mean autocracy. I think you mean autocrat as autocracy is a form of government. APPLIED TO: University of Toronto (Political Science) - ACCEPTED York (Political Science) - ACCEPTED Ryerson (Politics and Governance) - ACCEPTED
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