Quote:
Originally Posted by Manic_Skafe
Just as we have in the sexuality forum for shaving and penis size - we totally need a sticky thread for culture and race issues. It's nice to see all the activity but this is getting a little tedious.
And as for the hoochie dress, I can't help but to wonder not only what her parents thought of it but how she ever convinced them to pay for it. The cuffs were a bit too much but she totally could've worn them as an accessory.
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This was the first response to go anywhere near my own initial reaction.
There are serious issues to be addressed concerning raising our young, and this thread gets bogged down with race
As for the rest of this crapolla... Cynthetiq's signature says it best.
I wouldn't take the situation to the place tha blahblah454 suggests, (Originally Posted by blahblah454:
"Nice dress. If she were my daughter I would beat her for trying to even wear that out of the house.") but then, I'm rather confident that my daughter wouldn't make that kind of choice.
The school authorities were absolutely right in denying her entrance. The dress code was clearly stated. If the girl had simply left the scene civilly, the police would have never been involved.
As for those who question the police's handling of the situation: Their job, as I see it, was to defuse things before they got out of hand. If, in their estimation, the young lady was irritated to the point that she may have physically resisted being removed from the scene, then they were correct in using the cuffs as a precautionary restraint, as much to protect her as anyone else.