School Uniforms
"Limiting freedom," as you just said, is unconstitutional. Thank you for proving my
point. Clothing is not a direct effect on what kids "focus" on. When you find a reliable
source proving that clothing does not let children focus, then try that point again.
Once again, it is not the clothing which promotes violence. It is the children doing
it to themselves. If they were not to wear "gang" clothing, they would just get tattoos
or some other form of identification. If children are in gangs, they will be with
clothing or no clothing associated to that specific gang. Instead of teaching children
to not wear certain clothing, teach them morals and what is right and wrong to not
get involved with such groups. Once again, if the PERSON THEMSELVES consent to not
wearing things that they wish ie. private schools, that is fine. It is when the school
forces students is when we know it is a problem and a freedom violation. You have
no evidence tying any kind of clothing into "bullying," until you do, leave that point
to the side. You are speculating, wearing a certain shirt does not simply lower one's
self-esteem. You are talking like things like this happen very frequently and it is
a MAJOR problem. When in reality, it is not. When was the last time you heard about
a kid hurting themselves over clothing? There is a difference between dress codes
and When you find a reliable source proving that clothing does not let children focus,
then try that point again. Once again, it is not the clothing which promotes violence. It is the children doing
it to themselves. If they were not to wear "gang" clothing, they would just get tattoos
or some other form of identification. If children are in gangs, they will be with
clothing or no clothing associated to that specific gang. Instead of teaching children
to not wear certain clothing, teach them morals and what is right and wrong to not
get involved with such groups. Once again, if the PERSON THEMSELVES consent to not
wearing things that they wish ie. private schools, that is fine. It is when the school
forces students is when we know it is a problem and a freedom violation. You have
no evidence tying any kind of clothing into "bullying," until you do, leave that point
to the side. You are speculating, wearing a certain shirt does not simply lower one's
self-esteem. You are talking like things like this happen very frequently and it is
a MAJOR problem. When in reality, it is not. When was the last time you heard about
a kid hurting themselves over clothing? There is a difference between dress codes
and If children are in gangs, they will be with clothing or no clothing associated to
that specific gang. Instead of teaching children to not wear certain clothing, teach them morals and
what is right and wrong to not get involved with such groups. Once again, if the PERSON
THEMSELVES consent to not wearing things that they wish ie. private schools, that
is fine. It is when the school forces students is when we know it is a problem and
a freedom violation. You have no evidence tying any kind of clothing into "bullying,"
until you do, leave that point to the side. You are speculating, wearing a certain
shirt does not simply lower one's self-esteem. You are talking like things like this
happen very frequently and it is a MAJOR problem. When in reality, it is not. When
was the last time you heard about a kid hurting themselves over clothing? There is
a difference between dress codes and uniforms. That is a whole different debate. Please do not tie the two together because it
will get us nowhere. Please refrain in the future from using personal experiences
that may, or may not be true. I want to see facts. If there are none, come up with
a different point. How does a piece of clothing make children feel "left out?" If
anything, students express themselves and who they really are through their clothing
and freedom of speech, leading them to find like mind individuals and be more confident
in their shoes overtime.