right. Something objective. Once you make it subjective, can of worms. Only way to be consistent it no headwear or any headwear.
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Replying to @j_razor101 @HPluckrose
personally, for schools, I'd choose none. We don't need more ways to separate kids, we need less. Why I like the school uniform.
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Replying to @j_razor101
I'd choose freedom as much as possible. Not ban anything unless you really have to.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
broadly I agree. But we agree to curtail freedoms all the time if the argument is sound enough. I think this is one such.
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Replying to @j_razor101
I don't. I want anyone who wants to wear a headscarf to do so for any reason, not for it to be limited to religion &/or modesty.
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Replying to @HPluckrose @j_razor101
Doesn't affect me what other people do with their hair so no grounds to ban. My daughter likes to wear them. Indian, ex-Hindu.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
ok, small example. I think we're around the same age? Do you remember non-school uniform days. The rich(er) kids would 1/
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Replying to @j_razor101 @HPluckrose
come in decked in the latest expensive stuff. The poor(er) kids obviously not. Bullying, separation, tension quickly happened.
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Replying to @j_razor101
Sure but scarves don't cost a lot. Niqabs shouldn't be in schools cos a barrier but putting a scarf on doesn't do that.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
that's irrelevant. By your logic, allow the scarf, allow anything. Remember only the two extremes are consistent.
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