Ban kids from wearing clothing with offensive team logos, group urges

Mowich

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 25, 2005
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Equity officers from school boards across the province lobbying government, boards to force change

Ontario students should be banned from wearing clothing with offensive logos — such as the Cleveland Indians or Chicago Blackhawks — says a group of school board equity officials who are now lobbying the provincial government and directors of education to change dress codes.

“The use of pejorative indigenous names, logos and mascots is both an exploitation of indigenous cultural, spiritual and intellectual identity, and in many cases, a racist misrepresentation of that identity,” says a letter sent Monday to Education Minister Liz Sandals and Ontario education officials.

“This extends to students wearing clothing of amateur and professional teams that bear the pejorative and racist names and logos. When this occurs, our schools across Ontario are fostering a learning environment that is asking indigenous and non-indigenous children to tolerate racism and it must stop immediately.”

The letter, from the Equity Summit Group, representing 26 school board equity officers from across the province, says allowing such clothing, names or mascots violates the province’s own strategy on inclusive education and dealing with the issue is timely given the recent report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The group notes that Justice Murray Sinclair, who headed the commission, has publicly stated that such mascots “have no place in a country trying to come to grips with racism in its past.” “Why, in this day and age, do we allow racist logos?” Chris D’Souza, who founded the Equity Summit Group, told the Star.

“It seems to me it’s time for a mandate or directive from the ministry to school boards to ban (offensive logos and names) in schools,” he said, adding boards could then create — and update — a list of offensive logos or amend dress codes, while consulting with local aboriginal communities.

In the U.S., the names debate is in the news as the Washington Redskins of the National Football League continue to come under pressure to change it. In recent years, California has banned schools from using “Redskins” as a team name and in Madison, Wis., clothing with racial logos was banned, as were offensive mascots.

Closer to home, schools here have grappled with names or logos, with Scarborough’s West Hill Warriors keeping their name but changing their mascot, and, back in the 1990s, Runnymede Collegiate eliminating the “Redmen” team name.

Some have argued such names honour indigenous peoples, but Pardeep Singh Nagra of the Toronto District School Board said that can be done in other ways.

When he worked at the University of Toronto Mississauga more than a decade ago, the team was the Erindale Chiefs. “We went through a process with the local indigenous community there, because part of what we were trying to say was we don’t want to ban indigenous team names” only those that are pejorative, he said.

"The UTM team is now called the Eagles,” a symbol of spiritual peace. “If you want to honour a tradition, work with the community,” added Nagra, the board’s manager of employment equity and co-chair of the Equity Summit Group.

In a statement, Sandals said the province “(encourages) school boards to work with their schools and communities to ensure everyone feels safe, welcome, respected and included. Research shows that students who feel welcome and accepted in their schools are more likely to succeed academically.

“We continue to work in partnership with school boards and stakeholders to build awareness, understanding and respect for diversity among all members of the school community, and to identify and address discriminatory biases, stereotypes and barriers that may exist.”

Ban kids from wearing clothing with offensive team logos, group urges | Toronto Star

No worries here...........that is unless some animal rights group starts protesting the use of penguins on Pittsburgh's jerseys.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Who the hell decides what is "offensive"?

Really, the person who decides that something is offensive should be the offendee.

Whereas all we are getting is right-on liberal people - falafel-eating, Fair Trade coffee-drinking Guardian readers - getting "offended" on behalf of others. And the PC Brigade are so successful at their suppression of free expression because most of us meekly allow it to happen. We need to start fighting back against them. If the public rose up en masse against this sort of stuff the right-on liberals will disappear.
 

Jinentonix

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Sep 6, 2015
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Soooo burkhas and niqabs representing misogynistic attitudes towards women are cool but certain team logos aren't. It's astounding the lengths the Libtards will go to justify one thing while having a problem with something similar.
 

Nick Danger

Council Member
Jul 21, 2013
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Really, the person who decides that something is offensive should be the offendee.

Good in principle but how long would it take for people to start using the "offended" defense to force their version of morality on others. The trouble with rules that seek to ensure individual rights is that they assume that the people involved are going to use those rights responsibly and ethically.
 

davesmom

Council Member
Oct 11, 2015
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I can't figure out what is offensive about "Blackhawk", "Redskin", etc. It's pretty damned offensive to suggest that such people as 'Blackhawks' and 'Redskins' are somehow offensive.
What's offensive about calling an indigenous person an 'Indian'. What's offensive about calling an African American/Canadian a 'black' person?
The pc idiots who say these names should be changed are acting like racists, suggesting that everyone should be the same.
I think people should be encouraged to be proud of who they are, not have their racial origin ignored and the names they are/were called by perceived as 'offensive'.

Maybe if the pc crowd stopped drawing attention to these silly issues racism would have a better chance of disappearing. They are just keeping it alive with their nonsense.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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I think they should ban the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and the Minnesota Vikings. Glorifying these groups of vicious criminals and murderers by naming teams after them is offensive.

While we're at it, the Saskatchewan Roughriders is a reference to violent homosexual sex, and offensive. As is the scatological reference in the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Don't get me started on the Edmonton Eskimos. And the Ottawa Redblacks are offensive to FNs and Canadians of African descent.

The Maple Leafs are just plain offensive.
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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I think it is time these people sit down and shut up they are trying to social engineer
our society not for the better but in their image and I sure as hell don't want to live
like them
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Think how much fun it is making the rules though. Obviously for some people that is the reason they get up in the morning. Agreeing who is at fault is a debate they hope never ends, so far they have no need to fear that happening.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Ah, this is just so much recycled PC garbage. A few
years back they where doing something like this some
where around Fort Quapelle in some school. It wasn't
newsworthy until a native girl (student there) decided to
wear a Blackhawks jersey to school in protest, and got
sent home, and the fecal matter impacted the rotary
device. PC collides with PC....media whoring ensues,
a kerfuffle occurs....I don't even remember how it was
resolved....and it all faded away.

Just let the kids be kids and let them wear what they
want to. There will be time enough to jam the PC crap
down their throats and make them into tired automations
when they're older.