Today, my sister was sent home from school for wearing the clothes in the picture below. And I'm sorry but I have to stand up for my family and for women who are degraded and judged for their bodies and clothing everyday. People wonder why women feel insecure about their bodies or what they wear.. And it's beause you're told your clothing is inappropriate when you're completely fully clothed, even when you're not showing cleavage or anything. How about instead of body shaming women, school systems should start teaching 15-18 year old boys to stop degrading women with their eyes and contributing to the rape culture of today's society. Bottom line, girls cannot go to school in comfortable clothes THAT COVER EVERYTHING because school systems are afraid that hormonal boys won't be able to control their eyes and minds. And that is such a bigger problem than worrying about clothing. No, I do not believe that all boys in middle school/high school degrade young women or sexualize their bodies. That is my point.. this is not an inappropriate outfit, yet some are worried it might be seen that way, so they send girls home to change to try to avoid an issue and THAT is the problem.
If only she could have made her point without any bullshit "rape culture" references...And Turkey, aren't compression shorts considered underwear, socially? I see yoga pants and leggings as no less legitimate pants than skinny jeans or tight fitting sweat pants.
If the school says no yoga pants outside of gym class, like my school did, thems the rules.
This is why I got homeschooled
Quote from: Jester on April 07, 2015, 10:44:16 AMThis is why I got homeschooled...so you can wear yoga pants?
It's really easy to look up the school's dress code policy on their website, if we knew what the school was. That would put this to rest really quickly.
Quote from: Mad Max on April 07, 2015, 10:40:13 AMIt's really easy to look up the school's dress code policy on their website, if we knew what the school was. That would put this to rest really quickly.It's not really about the school's policy -- I think they were wrong in sending her home. It's about the validity of claiming dress codes are misogynist and if we create our social rules with inherent bias against either sex.
If it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.
Quote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:14:40 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?Basically yoga pants turned into leggings which turned into see-through leggings.
How about instead of body shaming women, school systems should start teaching 15-18 year old boys to stop degrading women with their eyes and contributing to the rape culture of today's society.
Quote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:15:56 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:14:40 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?Basically yoga pants turned into leggings which turned into see-through leggings.So what?
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:17:02 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:15:56 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:14:40 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?Basically yoga pants turned into leggings which turned into see-through leggings.So what?See-through leggings would clearly be a distraction.
Quote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:20:05 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:17:02 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:15:56 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:14:40 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?Basically yoga pants turned into leggings which turned into see-through leggings.So what?See-through leggings would clearly be a distraction.No they wouldn't. My school had tons of women who were wearing extremely skimpy clothing, and I wasn't even remotely distracted by that.
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:21:17 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:20:05 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:17:02 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:15:56 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:14:40 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?Basically yoga pants turned into leggings which turned into see-through leggings.So what?See-through leggings would clearly be a distraction.No they wouldn't. My school had tons of women who were wearing extremely skimpy clothing, and I wasn't even remotely distracted by that.You should write to the school board about it.
Quote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:23:39 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:21:17 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:20:05 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:17:02 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:15:56 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on April 07, 2015, 06:14:40 PMQuote from: Maverick on April 07, 2015, 06:13:48 PMIf it breaks the school dress code then it doesn't matter. The whole yoga pants fad has proven to be distracting and a slippery slope It makes sense for the school to have banned them. This has nothing to do with "body shaming".At my old high school, girls are allowed to wear yoga pants or leggings as long as they are wearing a long shirt. So the above picture would be acceptable. But every school's dress code is different and even if you disagree with it, it should be followed. Making this a sexism issue is a reach for sure.A slippery slope? The hell?Basically yoga pants turned into leggings which turned into see-through leggings.So what?See-through leggings would clearly be a distraction.No they wouldn't. My school had tons of women who were wearing extremely skimpy clothing, and I wasn't even remotely distracted by that.You should write to the school board about it.I don't really give enough shits about the whole issue to even consider demonstrating for/against it. And neither should you. It's just the choice of clothing that others want to make.