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15 May, 2004
Learning to Ride a Bike |
10 April, 2004
Responsible Computing |
13 March, 2004
The "Low-carb" Fad |
5
February, 2004
A day at the beach |
10
January, 2004
Are you a slave to your television? |
13
December, 2003
Multi-level Marketing |
15
November, 2003
Hollywood's Anti-Piracy Campaign |
October,
2003
The Friendly Canadian Prairies |
September
2003
"How's Married Life Treating You?" |
23 August, 2003
Eastern Blackouts |
26 July, 2003
Canada's swell |
31 May, 2003
Canadian marijuana law |
3 May, 2003
Canadian Literature and Culture |
5 April, 2003
Truth in Mass Media |
8 March, 2003
Careers away from home |
8 February, 2003
Checking out Vegas |
11 January, 2003
40-hour bus ride to the desert |
14 December, 2002
Kyoto accord |
16 November, 2002
U of A becoming more selective |
19 October, 2002
Alberta's employment boom |
21 September, 2002
Thinking about marijuana |
24 August, 2002
Health care, or
Wealth care? |
27 July, 2002
The uniquely
Canadian summer |
29
June, 2002
Soldiers and freaks |
1 June,
2002
My puritannical
place of birth |
1
May, 2002
Why activism? |
6 April, 2002
Child porn or
extreme art? |
2 March, 2002
The Olympics are a farce |
2
February, 2002
Information Control |
5
January, 2002
Disintegration
of language |
8 December, 2001
Why do we live so far north? |
3
November, 2001
Brand name America |
13
October, 2001
Teachers' Pay |
1 September, 2001
Consumption: Disease Old and New |
4 August, 2001
Paying the Global Costs of Automobiles |
7
July, 2001
Whyte Avenue Riot |
9 May, 2001
Good fences make good neighbours |
14 April,
2001
A healthy relationship with parents |
14 March,
2001
Sheep's clothing
wolves' reputations |
17 February,
2001
American universities
in Canada |
3 February,
2001
Love just the
way you want to |
6 January, 2001
Alberta's barren future |
23 December, 2000
What is Christmas, anyway? |
25 November, 2000
Learning on the job |
28
October, 2000
Family-oriented community? |
30
September, 2000
Freedom and happiness |
2
September, 2000
Consumerism in Bulgaria |
3
June, 2000
Visiting Ottawa |
29 April, 2000
School Shootings:
A Year Later |
8 April, 2000
A love shop in St. Albert |
18
March, 2000
Why reality TV? |
19
February, 2000
Raves |
5
February, 2000
Try listening on Valentine's Day |
8 January, 2000
The new millennium is for thinking |
4 December, 1999
The retail Christmas |
10 November, 1999
Young people and Remembrance Day |
16 October, 1999
Wayne Gretzky Drive |
18 September, 1999
High School students protest smoking ban |
21 August, 1999
Breast Enlargement |
26
June, 1999
Witchcraft |
5 June, 1999
School Uniforms |
30
May, 1999
Corrupt St. Albert RCMP |
22
May, 1999
Littleton and Taber
school shootings
|
1
May, 1999
Gay Marriage:
Less God, more love |
3 April, 1999
Drunken grad night |
March,
1999
All-consuming materialism |
20 February, 1999
What are you so proud of? |
30
January, 1999
Try a buy-nothing Valentine's Day |
9 January, 1999
The Real Value of Education |
December,
1998
New Year's Resolution |
24
October, 1998
On Faith |
September,
1998
The Starr Report |
2 September, 1998
High school hazing crimes |
1
August, 1998
Brand name clothing
|
15 July,
1998
Smoking is rude |
17
June, 1998
Sex and Violence |
20 May,
1998
Hockey Fever |
22
April, 1998
Religion is not Law |
11
March, 1998
Gay Bashing |
18
February, 1998
It's Only Hair |
17
January, 1998
"Riot" at a St. Albert heavy metal show
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| Babe's Official Music Site |
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Personal Pages |
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Audio Pages |
| Inside
the Matrix |
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"Like it is"
High School students protest smoking ban
18 September, 1999
|
This column may make me less popular with my younger peers. Still, in light of recent events, I feel the need to address the issue of student rights.
Young people deserve respect. They deserve the space to make their own decisions about their lives. Students should be taught to be responsible for themselves. Sometimes they have to learn just by suffering the consequences of their actions.
Also, young people need to be integrated into the society they will be inheriting. They should be taught about the privileges and restrictions of their culture. This is why I support the ban on High School smoking.
I approach this as a young person, and not as an elder wishing to discredit youth. But High School does not make one special. High School students are just people. In fact, High School students are generally minors, and the brutal (but fair) truth is that minors have fewer privileges than adults. Adulthood comes with rights and responsibilities that minors just don't have.
It is illegal for minors to purchase cigarettes. So why would schools owe student the right to consume what the law won't give them the right to have? High School teaches more than math, science, history, and art; it teaches socialization. Thus there is no justification for schools allowing students to be above the law. Minors cannot vote, enter bars, or buy pornography. Nor can they smoke.
High School students should be focussing on the rights and responsibilities of High School students—that is, studying, sports, arts, and (I know it's nerdy) other school functions. They should not be preoccupied with garnering themselves the rights of adults when they do not have the responsibilities of adults. (Anyway, smoking is childish and stupid to begin with. Don't get me started on its oral function.)
I was in High School once myself. It was a time of transition between youth and adulthood. Of preparation for life beyond high school. If one wants to act like they're an adult, they should not be living at home for free and enjoying a tax-subsidized education. Many students so value their freedom that they move out and drop out just to have it. But freedom comes in time. Youth is to be savoured, not resented and rushed through.
As valuable as the youth voice is in our culture, adults should still have authority. Young people deserve freedom, but the right to do anything anytime is just silly anarchy.
Dress code is another matter entirely. There are no laws involved. Students are not getting paid to attend school, so they should not have to submit to someone else's fashion judgement. Part of being young is rejoicing in innocence (which is another reason smoking in High School is silly).
High School students don't have to work (although they can choose to, and then wear a uniform at work). They just have to study and get along. Uniforms hamper proper socialization of young people by teaching them that anyone who looks different is wrong. Everyone looks different. Do we want to teach our youth to be like Americans, expecting everyone to be like us?
Part of youth is finding yourself through self-expression. (Why do you think babies and toddlers babble so much gibberish?). Part of adulthood is taking responsibility for your own decisions. Youth and adults each enjoy different forms of freedom. Youth can get funky; adults can get cancer. Sorry to sound old-fashioned, but that's just how it is, and how it should be. So students: stop fussing about "rights" and enjoy your inexpensive education. The road gets a lot rougher ahead. |
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