sonialakhani1994
sonialakhani1994
sonialakhani1994

Agreed. I hate this look. I don't think it's classy or sexy, I think it's purely done to shock people. She held that fur thing in front so people would think she was completely nude and then pulled in off in a "tada" moment.

Yuuuup. This isn't a feminist issue! This is about teaching your girls about how to dress for respect in a setting that, as a student, is essentially your workplace. School is your prep for the real world, people. Undergarments have no place in the workplace. To the commenter who has gotten no flack for bra straps

yes, but all workplaces have rules that you need to follow. there are workplaces where men have to wear suit pants, they cannot just show up in shorts becacuse it is a hot summer.

If short shorts, crop tops, etc become in vogue for men, then maybe they'll start mandating "modest clothing" for men too. If they don't respond to men that way that would be the time to get up in arms about this issue (or to use your argument).

Sigh. Is "Sexism of High School Dress Codes!!!" the new "Photoshopping Scandal!!!" of Jezebel?

That seems to be the new style and despite being a reasonably trendy, open woman in my mid twenties, I just don't get it. It makes a bit of sense for working out, so I let it slide when I see it at the gym, probably in part because sports bras are more innocuous and because I get so overheated every time I work out I

Sorry — if you can't do it in the workplace, you shouldn't be able to get away with it in school. What are you going to do when you get a job and it's hot outside — complain to HR that the company's dress code is too conservative? The school had rules, the kids should abide by them. Yeah, teach the boys to respect

We don't have dress codes where I am from, but to be honest I approve of people not showing off their underwear, I don't care if they are panties or bras and I don't care of the sex of the person doing it, I just like people who are dressed orderly.

that's ridiculous - dressing within the rules isn't necessarily preppy. Regular pair of shorts and a t shirt is not expensive.

"But it seems pretty clear that generally, dress-code rules for boys are generally about appearing "neat," while rules for girls are about "not creating a distraction.""

This is much ado about nothing. Different places have different dress codes. Boys at my school were "called out" for dress code violations just as much as the girls (for not wearing belts/sagging pants, primarily). Teaching young people that not everything in life is "come as you are" is helpful. I work in a law

white girl problems.

You may be on to something! Because frankly, if it was a poor black girl she'd likely be more concerned about REAL ISSUES like discrimination, education etc... Honestly, I'm a rich white girl and this whole crusade makes me vomit. FFS talk about a sheltered embarrassment of a person acting like a modern day Rosa

We are dismissing her concern because she must follow Instagram's rules while on their site. If she does not like it, she can quit Instagram and GTFO.

Nice false equivalency.

Pffft. This is just a young woman who happens to be conventionally attractive and trying to make it in the entertainment getting some free publicity.

Here's the thing about breasts: They're not amazing. They're not inappropriate. They're not empowering. They're not disgraceful. They are not a goddamn statement.

I don't find any of this empowering...

Not to be that cynical old person but I'm pretty sure attention was the whole point of this "protest" swathed in faux-feminist jargon. I'm going to add this to the pile of cis, conventionally attractive young white women who think that being nude/semi-nude automatically makes them walking performance art or a

It was incredible because people were paying attention to Scout Willis?