- Aug 10, 2009
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- #21
See? You are disagreed with, and you start acting all authoritarian and uptight.
Losen up, Pogo.
Losen up, Pogo.
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Pogo, did you go to a school with a dress code or required uniform?
Or is that you are just living a super duper libertarian hippy "against the Man" syndrome?
See? You are disagreed with, and you start acting all authoritarian and uptight.
Losen up, Pogo.
Teachers should dress like authority figures. No one is going to respect them if they dress like the kidsA friend is going to work in a conservative religious school: no elbows or collarbones visible.
I have always thought teachers' dress requirements should generally meet those of the students.
Teachers should be models of appropriate dress and behavior, as well as instructors.
The poll is easy: yes or no. Let's not hear any snowflake whining. Give us your opinion in a sensible manner.
I vote a resounding yes.
No, because "dress code" means uniformity, and uniformity sucks. It's a strongarm way to bury individuality, creativity, personal expression and it drops the hammer of authoritarianism.
Creative people find a way to display their individuality even with a uniform
But you must not be very creative
There is nothing wring with school uniforms if kids want to put on a fashion show they can do it after school
It's got zero to do with "fashion" or "looks" in any way.
It has to do with mind control and authoritarianism. It could be a "required" dress code, a "required" speech code, a "requred" religion, a "requred" cultural anything. When you're dictating robot behaviour, in whatever way, you're suppressing people. Period.
Arrested Development bullshit. Time to grow up, brainless hippie wannabe.
See what I mean about the authoritarian bullshit? ....
Pogo, did you go to a school with a dress code or required uniform?
Or is that you are just living a super duper libertarian hippy "against the Man" syndrome?
It could be both yanno.
First several years I went to Catholic school with its bullshit fake ties and the girls in their bullshit mandatory uniforms. I eventually escaped and nobody else in the family was condemned to that shit again after that point. For my entire life I have referred to that establishment as "the prison". Because that's exactly what it was.
Then in my professional career for years I was expected to wear a monkey suit. My protest statements were of necessity limited to creative tie patterns for which I got notorious. That too faded into the past with the eventual social rebellion against the mandatory conformity thing, and now I wear what I want and it's one hell of a lot more practical in a job that requires physical exertion.
I don't miss either of those nightmares in the slightest. Good riddance. The idea that one has to dress/act/speak a certain way only for somebody else's jollies is repugnant.
Yup, you are authoritarian and not honest, either.See? You are disagreed with, and you start acting all authoritarian and uptight.
Losen up, Pogo.
I ain't the one telling people what to wear, now am I.
It's curious, Jake, that you purport to put up an objective poll, call for honest objective responses, and then want to change votes you don't like. So much for objective.
Yup, you are authoritarian and not honest, either.See? You are disagreed with, and you start acting all authoritarian and uptight.
Losen up, Pogo.
I ain't the one telling people what to wear, now am I.
It's curious, Jake, that you purport to put up an objective poll, call for honest objective responses, and then want to change votes you don't like. So much for objective.
You have an opinion, like we all do.
You express your opinion, like we all do.
You disagree, which is your right.
But when I disagree, I am being a bully.
Grow up and act like an adult.
You disagree with me: I can live with you. And so should you.
Goodness.Yes ...
And you prove my point.Yup, you are authoritarian and not honest, either.See? You are disagreed with, and you start acting all authoritarian and uptight.
Losen up, Pogo.
I ain't the one telling people what to wear, now am I.
It's curious, Jake, that you purport to put up an objective poll, call for honest objective responses, and then want to change votes you don't like. So much for objective.
You have an opinion, like we all do.
You express your opinion, like we all do.
You disagree, which is your right.
But when I disagree, I am being a bully.
Grow up and act like an adult.
You disagree with me: I can live with you. And so should you.
Come off it, that's dishonest. YOU brought up "bully", not me. I simply observed that you asked for responses, and when you got one you don't agree with you get all butthurt.
That means you weren't honest about asking for responses in the first place. Apparently you just want an echo chamber on this one. You won't get it from me.
And I don't do Doublethink --- the authoritarian position would be dictating a dress code. That's the position I'm against. So you're full of shit.
No, because "dress code" means uniformity, and uniformity sucks. It's a strongarm way to bury individuality, creativity, personal expression and it drops the hammer of authoritarianism.
A friend is going to work in a conservative religious school: no elbows or collarbones visible.
I have always thought teachers' dress requirements should generally meet those of the students.
Teachers should be models of appropriate dress and behavior, as well as instructors.
The poll is easy: yes or no. Let's not hear any snowflake whining. Give us your opinion in a sensible manner.
I vote a resounding yes.
Goodness.Yes ...
Goodness.Yes ...
Yeah. That's a teacher I could get behind...
And you prove my point.Yup, you are authoritarian and not honest, either.See? You are disagreed with, and you start acting all authoritarian and uptight.
Losen up, Pogo.
I ain't the one telling people what to wear, now am I.
It's curious, Jake, that you purport to put up an objective poll, call for honest objective responses, and then want to change votes you don't like. So much for objective.
You have an opinion, like we all do.
You express your opinion, like we all do.
You disagree, which is your right.
But when I disagree, I am being a bully.
Grow up and act like an adult.
You disagree with me: I can live with you. And so should you.
Come off it, that's dishonest. YOU brought up "bully", not me. I simply observed that you asked for responses, and when you got one you don't agree with you get all butthurt.
That means you weren't honest about asking for responses in the first place. Apparently you just want an echo chamber on this one. You won't get it from me.
And I don't do Doublethink --- the authoritarian position would be dictating a dress code. That's the position I'm against. So you're full of shit.
You go to an educational institution, you accept the rules.
Teachers should dress like authority figures. No one is going to respect them if they dress like the kidsA friend is going to work in a conservative religious school: no elbows or collarbones visible.
I have always thought teachers' dress requirements should generally meet those of the students.
Teachers should be models of appropriate dress and behavior, as well as instructors.
The poll is easy: yes or no. Let's not hear any snowflake whining. Give us your opinion in a sensible manner.
I vote a resounding yes.