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#10 | |||||
Admiral
![]() Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 2,247
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Yes I'm joking.
But then I must ask in return, are you joking aswell? You've managed to resume all that crap in a damned 8-word sentence? I'm gonna start sending my posts to you as Private Messages so you can do this more often. If you assist me, I will... let me see... hmmm........ teach you how to kill somebody with a lapel badge! I learned it "off" Chuck Norris. Literally, Chuck Norris doesn't need to actually teach anything to anybody, just being on his presence is enlightening enough. I was wearing my "I heart Chuck Norris" lapel badge when I met him in Three-mile Island, so he must've seen it and that's the reason for this piece of knowledge to have emanated from him instead of what I actually went there to learn: how to grab and hold Comet McNaughty with my own hands to give me another chance of looking at it. Oh, he was there decontaminating the place by eating and drinking the radioactive stuff. Quote:
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But I need to get back to large rings and necklace pulling. It is possible for people to get punched by hands wearing large rings and for necklaces to be pulled tightly from any direction, you could even get your necklace stuck on the sanitary vase, depending on the length of the chain and the structure of the vase itself, after having your head dumped inside it by mean girls, heck, you could even drown if the necklace got stuck tight enough and if you couldn't keep pressing the flushing valve to lower the water level. It's also possible to get punched by ringless hands and for cheap necklaces to break at the slightest gentle contact. It is also possible for none of this to ever happen. It's possible for the kids to never be punched in the face with large rings or at all and it's possible for them to never have their necklaces tightly pulled or even touched at all. Do you know where I can find statistics about such cases? Or is this H&S policy based solely on one or two anecdotal stories and possibilities? Not that we should fall victim of Empirism, I would just like to know how the risk was assessed. The school has every right to dictate their policy as they see fit. On what kind of experience and with what intention the policy is based, however, seems not only to be unknown but impossible to discern, given the ambiguity of "Health & Safety". The perfect Health & Safety enviroment is an air-tight plastic bubble with anti-biological, chemical and radioactive filters. Not that being punched with large rings and having your necklaces pulled are much of a lesson (though it could be) but such a perfect bubble enviroment isn't much of a learning place either. Health & Safety isn't an autonomous element then and definitely not the guiding principle of a school. Why, then, is it used as if it were? If it's a matter of dress code, it's dress code, not Health & Safety. But let's take it as a case of Health & Safety. Possibilities for possibilities I choose the optimist selection. Unless the pupils are complete bullying-maniacs and display hate, envy and aggressive acts all too often. If that's the reality then indeed there is no choice at all. Quote:
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"Tout ce qui est exagéré est insignifiant." ("All that is exaggerated is insignificant.") - Talleyrand |
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