Comments by "Yerris" (@yerri5567) on "Why young Hongkongers are unimpressed with new sex education" video.
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'you just admitted you are wrong. You said “even if some somehow find a way, overall numbers…” see, congratulations, even you have admitted you can’t stop kids'
Wrong? I literally proved myself right. I literally said: it doesnt eliminate it 100%, but the figures significantly drop over the years depending how strict the policy/enforcement is". I never said 100% of the kids, so by definition I cant be wrong. If it can control 95% of the kids, thats still controlling 95% of the kids. Is that not stopping the overwhelming majority of kids?
"But what do you mean strict governance?"
You dont know? This is standard policy in all countries with school uniforms. First off, detention. If kid continues to breaking the rules, then an optional step #2 is kid is barred entry into school and have parents notified to have them picked up and changed before they can enter school. If kid still does not comply, then suspension along with parent notification/meeting. After a couple more strikes then kid gets expelled. This literally works for 99.99%+ of the kids. If you want to talk about the 0.1% exceptions, then Ill tell you exceptions do not disprove the rule. We change from 0% to 99.99%. That by all metrics means "controlling the kids".
"Two teenagers get off the bus together with a few hours of time before their parents come home...how do uniforms stop kids from doing what they want after school? Again, both teenagers come home before their parents do. Who will stop them?"
Irrelevant. There is no governance after school from the school. The school is not responsible for what a child does after school. Thats extremely irresponsible for you to even think that its their responsibility. They could get changed and roam around wearing whatever they want for all that we care. Its still not the schools responsibility outside of school grounds. You expect the school to govern what they wear at home too? School only governs what happens within the school, not outside the school. Try again.
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@mudshovel289 'you just admitted you are wrong. You said “even if some somehow find a way, overall numbers…” see, congratulations, even you have admitted you can’t stop kids'
Wrong? I literally proved myself right. I literally said: it doesnt eliminate it 100%, but the figures significantly drop over the years depending how strict the policy/enforcement is". I never said 100% of the kids, so by definition I cant be wrong. If it can control 95% of the kids, thats still controlling 95% of the kids. Is that not stopping the overwhelming majority of kids?
"But what do you mean strict governance?"
You dont know? This is standard policy in all countries with school uniforms. First off, detention. If kid continues to breaking the rules, then an optional step #2 is kid is barred entry into school and have parents notified to have them picked up and changed before they can enter school. If kid still does not comply, then suspension along with parent notification/meeting. After a couple more strikes then kid gets expelled. This literally works for 99.99%+ of the kids. If you want to talk about the 0.1% exceptions, then Ill tell you exceptions do not disprove the rule. We change from 0% to 99.99%. That by all metrics means "controlling the kids".
"Two teenagers get off the bus together with a few hours of time before their parents come home...how do uniforms stop kids from doing what they want after school? Again, both teenagers come home before their parents do. Who will stop them?"
Irrelevant. There is no governance after school from the school. The school is not responsible for what a child does after school. Thats extremely irresponsible for you to even think that its their responsibility. They could get changed and roam around wearing whatever they want for all that we care. Its still not the schools responsibility outside of school grounds. You expect the school to govern what they wear at home too? School only governs what happens within the school, not outside the school. Try again.
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'you just admitted you are wrong. You said “even if some somehow find a way, overall numbers…” see, congratulations, even you have admitted you can’t stop kids'
Wrong? I literally proved myself right. I literally said: it doesnt eliminate it 100%, but the figures significantly drop over the years depending how strict the policy/enforcement is". I never said 100% of the kids, so by definition I cant be wrong. If it can control 95% of the kids, thats still controlling 95% of the kids. Is that not stopping the overwhelming majority of kids?
"But what do you mean strict governance?"
You dont know? This is standard policy in all countries with school uniforms. First off, detention. If kid continues to breaking the rules, then an optional step #2 is kid is barred entry into school and have parents notified to have them picked up and changed before they can enter school. If kid still does not comply, then suspension along with parent notification/meeting. After a couple more strikes then kid gets expelled. This literally works for 99.99%+ of the kids. If you want to talk about the 0.1% exceptions, then Ill tell you exceptions do not disprove the rule. We change from 0% to 99.99%. That by all metrics means "controlling the kids".
"Two teenagers get off the bus together with a few hours of time before their parents come home...how do uniforms stop kids from doing what they want after school? Again, both teenagers come home before their parents do. Who will stop them?"
Irrelevant. There is no governance after school from the school. The school is not responsible for what a child does after school. Thats extremely irresponsible for you to even think that its their responsibility. They could get changed and roam around wearing whatever they want for all that we care. Its still not the schools responsibility outside of school grounds. You expect the school to govern what they wear at home too? School only governs what happens within the school, not outside the school. Try again.
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'you just admitted you are wrong. You said “even if some somehow find a way, overall numbers…” see, congratulations, even you have admitted you can’t stop kids'
Wrong? I literally proved myself right. I literally said: it doesnt eliminate it 100%, but the figures significantly drop over the years depending how strict the policy/enforcement is". I never said 100% of the kids, so by definition I cant be wrong. If it can control 95% of the kids, thats still controlling 95% of the kids. Is that not stopping the overwhelming majority of kids?
"But what do you mean strict governance?"
You dont know? This is standard policy in all countries with school uniforms. First off, detention. If kid continues to breaking the rules, then an optional step #2 is kid is barred entry into school and have parents notified to have them picked up and changed before they can enter school. If kid still does not comply, then suspension along with parent notification/meeting. After a couple more strikes then kid gets expelled. This literally works for 99.99%+ of the kids. If you want to talk about the 0.1% exceptions, then Ill tell you exceptions do not disprove the rule. We change from 0% to 99.99%. That by all metrics means "controlling the kids".
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