To be honest, that's the argument that's popular with students. I personally never really bother with what I wear. I already have clothes that look good on me (so I hear, at least), and I just pick them up very quickly and put them on and it looks normal. I understand it is easier for guys, but maybe girls also sometimes try too hard to wear something fashionable. If you can wear whatever you want, doesn't mean you should think about how to look sexy. Just pick out whatever you see first and put it on. No effort there, and it'll save you the price of the uniform and the trouble of washing it often. And besides, girls look good and guys will be attracted by them no matter what. And looking good isn't the only important thing...There is much more to the laws of attraction.Wutaiflea said:Most schools in the UK have a uniform anyway, and I always liked it that way- it meant picking out clothes during the morning was a no-brainer no matter how hungover I was, and it was always good fun stretching the rules...
Even in private schools with uniforms, people will still bully each others. In fact, this private school a few of my friends went to, the "nerds" were a bunch of gigantic condescending, ego-driven bastards that thought they were better than everybody. They bullied people...Though they never got flak for it, because their grades were good. They acted like children and believed that anyone who wasn't fond of their nerdy trips and of geeky video games and movies in general were INFERIOR. This group apparently didn't get many friends, but they started changing after a while...So I hear. They weren't very intimidating, according to those few friends, just really annoying and immature. They even insulted girls who wore makeup and whatnot.
I don't personally bear much importance at what someone wears when I talk to them. I just talk to them, and if I feel good talking to them, I'll just continue doing so and probably befriend them that way. It's really not hard once you try.
So much prejudice...You'll always find it, no matter how much you enforce laws. Schools should really be more open-minded and try to teach this open-mindedness to their students.
But of course, in countries like the US, UK and Australia, that would be against the bible...and would just openly show the denial that christianism is just an incoherent, incongruent, inconsistent, contradictory sack of myths, false assumptions, false prophecies, false prejudices, and lies. Let's face it, I'm pretty sure even Vatican realizes this, but would be to afraid of the responsibility of the backlash and the massively scary results of admitting the truth. I'm happy I live in a Canadian province where people don't give a flying f. about religion and are even against letting religious parties promote their practices and practice in public. It should be this way.
We are facing an age of socialization and advanced science. An age where cultural flaws show and cultures unite and become more open-minded and enlightened.
Wow, I got pretty off-topic.
Sorry if I offend anyone or if you all feel I'm trolling. That wasn't my intention. My intention was putting my opinion out there. If you feel I am wrong, I am welcome to any argument and criticism, as long as it is not bashing or insulting. (Again, sorry if I seem a bit too radical or bashing/insulting, and feel free to point it out...it's your right to, after all.)