I feel like the holodeck probably has a “private browsing” mode. It would be like the first thing they implemented.
I feel like the holodeck probably has a “private browsing” mode. It would be like the first thing they implemented.
post a comment
see someone else posted something similar
delete comment
sometimes idk why i bother
banning cultural appropriation
based
The shtart button.
The shtart button.
Don’t push.
The shtart button.
Be right back!
Everybody has limits set on their behavior in society generally, and in schools those limits are often more strict. I also object to the notion that enforced dress on a gendered basis is a “harmless or innocuous” practice.
invoking the UN
lol nerd
I worded it poorly, but my point was that France’s enforcement of a dress code is far less extreme than the cultural intervention in Xinjiang. Furthermore I think that all of the people in this thread who’ve compared it to Native American residential schooling are themselves engaging in genocide denial by way of minimization.
wear shoes and shirt
wear dress that is explicitly designed to dehumanize you
these are the same thing
any visible deviations from the dominant (liberal Christian) culture.
This is an impasse. You look at French culture and see a liberal Christian one, I see a liberal secular one. When Christianity infects schools you don’t get dress codes you get much more overt and disgusting propagandizing, like what’s being pushed in Florida right now.
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“Democratic Socialism” is a term for a specific school of thought within socialism that I am criticizing for its tendency to align with imperial, ie US/NATO foreign policy that has created a system of unequal exchange that keeps most of the world in poverty in order to fund the excesses of the first world. It does not mean “socialism but we have a democracy”, that’s every form of socialism. Also it generally has a different meaning when applied to socialist movements in third world countries, which is why I wouldn’t criticize a party like MAS for the same reason.
I consider China’s Whole-Process People’s Democracy to be the current gold standard democratic process on this planet. Democracy should not end when people vote for their representatives, it should be a constant process of polling and implementing the will of the people, and its success is why Chinese citizens have among the highest satisfaction with their government of anyone.
The kids aren’t being made to attend church on Sunday. They’re being made to be part of a secular society, one that takes its secularism more seriously than many other countries do.
Presumably if a bunch of Mormons or Mennonites or whatever else set up in France and all their kids dressed the same way, the school would step in on that too. Maybe they wouldn’t, but then the problem isn’t the policy it’s biased enforcement.
Are kids meaningfully capable of exercising their freedom of conscience though? I’m not suggesting that every religious parent would kick their children out of the house for not dressing a certain way, but I am saying that every religious parent puts their finger on the scale of their kids’ decision. Schools can and should seek to eliminate these kinds of cultural differences within the student body because it teaches kids to segregate themselves, that’s why school uniforms are generally a good thing.
I would argue that indoctrinating a child into wearing religious dress is a violation of that child’s human rights and that they should be protected from it by the state.
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tbf to France I’m pretty sure that if girls showed up in nun habits they would be sent home too. They make you take off visible jewelry if it has a cross on it AFAIK.
This is a minor point but the ten years for a car thing was for a brand new, highly-in-demand Russian Lada. The average wait time to buy a Trabi was 1 year, and the Eastern Bloc had an active used market by the 1970s so you could buy vehicles from other socialist countries without waiting if that’s what you wanted to do (and of course rentals were plentiful because the government wanted to keep actual car ownership managably low).
You seem to be under the impression that I think America deserves 20% credit for dislodging the Japanese Empire. I’m sorry for giving you this mistaken impression, because in truth America deserves 0% credit for doing it. America did not defeat the Japanese Empire and liberate the former imperial holdings, they simply captured it for themselves instead.
Also the effectiveness of lend-lease and other actions taken by America to weaken their imperial rival economically are greatly overstated.
They’re kinda halfway onto something, but miss the mark as expected of a *chan user.