Ringo84
Separation of Church and State expert
- Jul 31, 2006
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First, don't wear things that associate you with the feminine gender.
Items that would associate you with the female gender are a bra, a skirt, panties, dresses and the like. A pink shirt does not qualify.
Second, it was not him, it was two other boys who came up with this limp-wristed idea of pink t-shirts.
How is it "limp-wristed"? It's a shirt. Just because it's colored pink does not make it any more "feminine" than anything you wear.
wear manly colors.
What are "manly colors"? Why are there "manly" colors in the first place? The problem here is not your idea that the kid in question was "limp-wristed" but that we have associated things like colors with cultural phenomena such as gender. Pink is not a male or female color - it's just a color.
I guess I am older than most of you here.
You don't act like it.
In my days in school, we just faced the bully, or stayed bullied forever. I never knuckled under to the bullies. I fought back. I was in quiet a few scraps when I was a youngster. One thing that I learned from my father was, if someone is picking on you, you first walk away and try to avoid a fight. Sometimes this works. After that if he keeps it up, (remember this is my dad saying this) "you pick up a stick and wrap it across his face". My dad grew up in the south Bronx in a real rough side of town. He would also talk all the time about picking up an "ash-can" and smack it across the guys head. Which always sounded funny to me and my brothers since we grew up in L.A.. There are no "ash-cans" in L.A.. All you New Yorkers can probably relate to the "ash-can" thing. The real point of the moral is, don't let someone bully you or he will keep doing it.
That's easy for you to say. I was bullied in middle school for no reason other than the fact that I was different. The idea of fighting back against bullies looks good on paper but it's not as easy in practice. I doubt you were even bullied in school and therefore had a problem. Considering how you have more defended the bullies and blamed the victim, you seem more like the type that was the bully - not the bullied.
But flying pink/feminine colors would have never ever happened in my day. It would have only brought ten times more persecution. I also wonder if there hasn't been any back-lash against these pink boys. The story doesn't say anything about that. However, I can guarantee you that these pink boys are the butt of many jokes now on that campus. I played football when I was in high school, and I can tell you from experience that the coaches are probably using these pink boys as an example of --let's just say something less than... Well I think you get the picture.
There are no "feminine colors".
The very fact that we are discussing this shows you that I am right.
But you aren't right. Your stance on the matter has been: "well, the boy was wearing quote-unquote 'feminine colors' and therefore deserved what he got". That's what a bully who's trying to make himself feel better says - not someone who's giving the "issue" (why is this even an issue?) a fair shake.
Ringo
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