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Member
(05-08-2012, 05:58 PM)
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#201
lol.... for the 5000th fucking time the guy that dressed up like Jesus DID get in trouble. He was rewarded by an Atheist group.
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King of Twin-Tails
(05-08-2012, 05:58 PM)
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#202
If that shirt is against the rules, it's against the rules. Fuck this little shithead just like that other shithead that came dressed up as Jesus. School's a place to learn, not for you to make statements so you can get pats on the back from your parents/church/other peers/random people on the internet. He knew that shit would be a disruption.
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Member
(05-08-2012, 06:02 PM)
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#203
If his personal beliefs are so strong, maybe he should attend a school where most students share his belief, simple as that, there's nothing more dangerous than a teenager (a kid) CONSTANTLY FORCING his personal beliefs and agenda on to other vulnerable kids in a public school environment. Religious, political or personal belief sharing, exchanging should always be in controlled environments with teachers and counselors present in high schools. EDIT: I also think that all schools (specially public) should make uniforms mandatory, what individuality? no teenager these days has true individuality, and your stupid fashion statement isn't and shouldn't be the way to separate yourself from the next kid! College will you give you lots of time to dress how you want to, and not be an asshat about it.
Last edited by Johnny Cage In The Shower; 05-08-2012 at 06:10 PM.
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Member
(05-08-2012, 06:10 PM)
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#204
This reminds me of this one incident from back when I was in high school: a girl wore an anti-Nazi shirt to school with a design similar to this one:
![]() She was made to take it off and told not to wear it again. No matter how much I hated the administration at the time, they were no Nazis. The shirt was too provocative and would disrupt the learning environment. |
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Member
(05-08-2012, 06:33 PM)
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#205
All schools should just implement uniform.
When I first started at high school, you could wear whatever you want. Then in second year they implemented a mandatory uniform. Everyone was upset at first but after a few weeks nobody cared. Black trousers, white shirt and the school tie. You didn't need to think about what you were going to wear in the morning, you didn't care if they got in a mess, and apparently it reduced bullying since you couldn't spot the poorer kids that couldn't afford the newest trends. It also made the school look a lot smarter. |
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Member
(05-08-2012, 06:42 PM)
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#206
One is a statement of racial intolerance. One is a statement of religious intolerance. Using your own personal feelings, you are putting them into tiers and saying one is worse than the other. Well, I might very well agree with you there, but that doesn't change the fact both shirts are bigoted and attacking a certain group of people. It's the same reason I use the civil rights movement when trying to get people to realise how non-heterosexual people have it bad in society today - people automatically tier stuff in their head. Who are you to declare that just because one of those tshirt slogans is based around the supernatural, it's okay? For the people who believe in the supernatural - the jews, muslims, hindus, sihks, whatevers - it will be just as hurtful as black people seeing a "blacks should be hanged" tshirt. |
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Banned
(05-08-2012, 06:47 PM)
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#207
Kid comes into school wearing "Allah is the one and only God" and I guarantee you there would be a stink. |
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Writing a dinosaur space opera symphony
(05-08-2012, 07:00 PM)
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#208
With the additional information on the story, it seems pretty damn simple tho plenty of people will spin it as religious persecution by librrruls.
Guy is a dick who has a shown a pattern of harassing other kids. The t-shirt is not a statement of free speech. It's his latest tool of harassment, escalating his crusade to tell everyone else they're damned and going to hell. |
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Honourary member of the SISTERHOOD
(05-08-2012, 07:02 PM)
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#209
Shirts fine as long as the rest of the class wears "If you're Christian, you believe in lies." shirts.
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Honourary member of the SISTERHOOD
(05-08-2012, 07:12 PM)
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#214
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clairvoyancy is no excuse for trollin'
(05-08-2012, 07:13 PM)
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#215
The ACLU would help him out in the USA, hopefully Canada has a similar organization to help him.
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Member
(05-08-2012, 07:13 PM)
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#216
people are missing the point entirely.
He wore this shirt for several weeks straight, he was probably told to remove it because it smelt really bad. But seriously, a week straight of wearing the shirt, attacking students, and being confrontational, I think it's fully deserved. The way it's written is as if he was attacked for his beliefs, but it's obvious that he was the one who was attacking other students. Imagine being muslim or jewish and being told every day your going to hell, how is that not akin to bullying? Sounds like people are defending him based on the headline without reading the article, pretty typical.
Last edited by les papillons sexuels; 05-08-2012 at 07:25 PM.
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corporate swill
(05-08-2012, 07:23 PM)
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#217
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Member
(05-08-2012, 07:25 PM)
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#218
What's your point? I can think something is stupid as hell but also recognize making it illegal/punishing it is also dumb.
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Member
(05-08-2012, 07:54 PM)
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#221
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contribute something
(05-08-2012, 08:15 PM)
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#224
Although the shirt's slogan was offensive, and basically says "All Non-Christians go to Hell", the kid has the right to wear it. I'm not completely how loose Canadian civil liberties are, but I doubt there are any restrictions on religion or speech.
Still, he's a dick for wearing it. |
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Banned
(05-08-2012, 08:52 PM)
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#226
I still think banning the shirt is dumb. Suspend him for his behavior, not a shirt. (good post BTW, but you can still disagree with simple shirt bans either way) People usually assume these cases involve knee-jerk reactions... and they usually do involve something causing a problem before anything gets "banned." Like the kids wearing American Flags on some day celebrating Mexico in California or something.. people ignored that they were doing it purposefully, and it had caused disruptions in school. The kid in this case, IMO, is the disruption. But I will regress a bit, sometimes a "ban" is necessary simply to solve a problem. Making sure the school operates effectively is more important than your "right" to wear a particular shirt IMO.. I still think these things very often backfire; but it's when they are based on nothing.. as opposed to based on an actual disruption (like this case) in the operation of the schools intended purpose.. to teach.
Last edited by nVidiot_Whore; 05-08-2012 at 08:55 PM.
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Member
(05-08-2012, 09:02 PM)
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#227
That shirt reminded me of this one time when I was minding my own business playing my DS when all of a sudden this guy comes up and says "Why are you wasting your life on that when you should be worshiping/believing in Jesus." I told him I believed in him and he was like "NO! You don't believe in him enough like we do." I was like okay then. Then his phone rang and he said "I got another one" to the guy he was talking to or something like that. Now that pissed me off. Was I nothing more than another potential money giver to "his" church/religion and he didn't actually care about me at all?
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(05-08-2012, 09:10 PM)
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#228
The kid really didn't understand that the shirt was an ultimatum on other people's beliefs?
Yeah, right. |
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Member
(05-08-2012, 09:28 PM)
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#230
I am good with uniforms as well, but I've seen a lot of school board and community fights over this. While uniforms solve some problems, they introduce a host of others. It's not a slam dunk. Are we talking about those "clever" ThinkGeek shirts that say "I never finish anyth"? If that's all you have in your closet? Yes. |
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This sh!t needs to stop?
(05-08-2012, 09:50 PM)
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#231
This a joke?
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This sh!t needs to stop?
(05-08-2012, 09:55 PM)
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#233
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Member
(05-08-2012, 10:00 PM)
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#234
I don't see anything inappropriate about the shirt. That 'Jesus Is A Cunt' shirt would rightfully be banned from schools for cursing and pornography. Another atheist here.
This is the best Jesus shirt... http://tshirtdaily.com/abstinence-99...in-mary-jesus/ |
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(05-08-2012, 10:03 PM)
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#235
Schools shouldn't have extra-curricular activities? |
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Member
(05-08-2012, 10:06 PM)
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#238
The shirt was just a continuation of the student's disruptive behaviour and intolerant views. The appropriate steps were taken, the student didn't comply and he was suspended. If the parents really don't like the school he's enrolled in, I'm sure they can send him somewhere else. |
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Banned
(05-08-2012, 10:13 PM)
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#239
If he is ok with me wearing a t-shirt that says "Jesus likes it in the rear" followed by a picture of jesus bending over and lifting his tunic, then he can wear his stupid t-shirt.
Both should ofc be allowed, I just don't think this dude is about "free speech" at all. Alas, that's just my bigotry-radar talking. |
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(05-08-2012, 10:32 PM)
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#240
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underwear police
(05-08-2012, 11:29 PM)
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#243
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Member
(05-08-2012, 11:42 PM)
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#244
Yeah so...not sure where this stands, but wearing that hideous-ass t-shirt should be cool; telling people they're going to suffer eternal torment is basically a threat and so should not be cool.
EDIT: I went to school in the south so people told me about fucking Jesus all the time, and it got on my nerves but it never crossed my mind that they were infringing on my rights or anything. I have the right to ignore them or tell their beliefs are dumb at best and terrifying at worst, but I didn't have the balls to do that. I actually did have one guy who told me that he was 'concerned' for me because he 'didn't want to see me end up in hell'. If you grew up in the South you know the type of dude I'm talking about; tall, athletic, good-looking, into sports and video games and laid back, but then after you get to know him he's suddenly like 'Hey bro, I was just wondering if you have a relationship with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.'
Last edited by Conciliator; 05-08-2012 at 11:47 PM.
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USA schools learnt me up something good
(05-09-2012, 04:58 AM)
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#247
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Member
(05-09-2012, 05:36 AM)
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#248
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Member
(05-09-2012, 05:52 AM)
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#249
Suspend him for telling people they'll go to hell sure, but for the T Shirt? Poor form for the school and the Principal for continually asking him to stop wearing it. He's not affecting anyone's rights by wearing it, just the ass hurt feelings of some overly dramatic and ironically rights defeating atheists.
If the T Shirt read, "non believers you're going to hell" or something, maybe there'd be a better argument here. But damn, if someone wore a T Shirt that said, "a life is wasted without being aethist", I'd be like, yea bit of a weird thing to have on a t-shirt, but its your right and belief, cool. And I'm religious. |
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Member
(05-09-2012, 06:37 AM)
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#250
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