Kerry Howley | October 25, 2006
Yesterday was "Camouflage Day" at Virginia's Marshall Middle School:
As the first bell rang, students bounded into hallways wearing twig- and branch-imprinted jackets or sporting fatigues stamped U.S. Army.
Principal Christine Moschetti said the school asked the students to don the martial clothing to show support for "the fight against drugs." She wore a leafy, oversized camouflage T-shirt that she had bought at Wal-Mart for $5...
Seventh-grader Tyler Hale described his outfit with pride. "The vest is from Desert Storm," he said, referring to the Persian Gulf War. It was a gift from a family friend. The pants were for hunting. "I go every year," he said.
Camouflage was more popular among boys, but girls got into the spirit, too.
What spirit would that be? Is tomorrow Trench Coat Day? Then again, it's hard to think of a better sartorial dictate with which to glorify the drug war. A clearly supportive Washington Post article surveys the other options:
In Prince George's County, students at Benjamin Stoddert Middle School wore red socks Monday to "sock it to drugs." In Prince William County, Woodbridge Middle School students dressed like twins yesterday "to pair up against drugs." In Loudoun County, Round Hill Elementary School students will have a Crazy Hair Day tomorrow to remind them to "use your head; don't do drugs."
I think they've really got something with the sock thing.
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In Prince George's County, students at Benjamin Stoddert
Middle School wore red socks Monday to "sock it to drugs." In
Prince William County, Woodbridge Middle School students dressed
like twins yesterday "to pair up against drugs." In Loudoun County,
Round Hill Elementary School students will have a Crazy Hair Day
tomorrow to remind them to "use your head; don't do
drugs."
Here are three more reasons why -- if I ever had kids -- I would
send them to private school.
Hip-waders for Global Warming Day.
Paste-on skin tumors for Ozone Hole Day.
French Maid outfits for Pedophile Day.
The potential here boggles the mind.
Camouflage Day is the perfect day to skip school because you can always use the excuse that you were counted absent because the teacher couldn't see you in the brush and thicket.
Even though I homeschool, I make sure to have at least one "Fuck Drugs in the Ass" day every semester.
...Because it's fun to smoke a bowl around the campfire when
you're out hunting.
Good to see that they're establishing the connection early.
In the upper midwest a "camo day" would be seen as supporting hunting. Phasers on stun, here comes PETA
Hey, watch the snide comments. Teachers and administrators in the public school system have all been to college. Many have masters degrees. Surely they have empirical evideence to support that this kind of IDIOCY reduces drug usage.
Yes, private schools would never do such ridiculous things. (This from someone who's parents spent thousands over thirteen years on Catholic schooling, so their son could grow up to be athiest.)
Is this all because yesterday was "United Nations Day".
Man, i'm glad I puffed drugs in high school instead of doing
melvinish stuff like that.
shecky,
I went to private school and public school...and I daresay private
school, although guilty of its own idiosynchrocies, is slightly
less lame in certain regards...
It's disturbing that the narco-pigs have conscripted children to spread the Drug War propaganda.
I wonder what the smartass kids are doing to make fun of camo day? Wear a coat and tie?
You all do realize that the kids that get into this stuff the most are our future 'leaders', right?
Anyone else here suspect whoever came up with these stupid little gimmicks was high at the time?
While I understand that Reasonoids love nothing more than taking
cheap shots at public schools, it makes you guys seem even more
smarmy than usual to condemn a fun activity for children that helps
remind them about the dangers of drug use.
All kid's activities are going to seem childish to adults, that's
the whole point.
"I went to private school and public school...and I daresay
private school, although guilty of its own idiosynchrocies, is
slightly less lame in certain regards..."
i'd agree, but i don't think this is one of those areas.
unfortunately, private/parochial schools in my area are pioneering
the way for mandatory drug testing of all students - to the tune of
overwhelming parental support it seems.
i'd rather my kid be encouraged to wear red socks for some lame
campaign than have their hair cut to be tested for drugs - which is
far more lame in my opinion.
Dan T, It would also seem childish and stupid to your average to above average middle school student. Never underestimate the sensitivity of adolescent BS detectors.
Dan T, It would also seem childish and stupid to your
average to above average middle school student. Never underestimate
the sensitivity of adolescent BS detectors.
At least according to the linked story, "Most students responded
enthusiastically to the event"
All kid's activities are going to seem childish to adults,
that's the whole point.
Dan T., it's not the kid's activities which seem childish, it's the
adult activities which seem childish. That's the
point.
While I understand that Reasonoids love nothing more than
taking cheap shots at public schools, it makes you guys seem even
more smarmy than usual to condemn a fun activity for children that
helps remind them about the dangers of drug use.
Yes, my daughter, when in 1st grade, came home with all sorts of
"drug awareness" paraphernalia ("hehe, he said "paraphernalia")
that the public school she goes to crammed into her backpack.
She had no idea what drugs were before that day, but she surely
knows what they are now.
Anyone else here suspect whoever came up with these stupid
little gimmicks was high at the time?
b-psycho:
Suspect? This confirms it. Given the quality of our public education establishment,
should we be surprised?
How are kids supposed to learn if they're just lying there
inert?
Oh, camo day. Not coma day.
Yes, my daughter, when in 1st grade, came home with all
sorts of "drug awareness" paraphernalia ("hehe, he said
"paraphernalia") that the public school she goes to crammed into
her backpack.
She had no idea what drugs were before that day, but she surely
knows what they are now.
Learning about things is kind of the idea behind school.
Stevo Darkly,
Oh, I thought they were talking about Ammo Day. But that's next
month.
At least according to the linked story, "Most students
responded enthusiastically to the event"
I work for the type of small-town paper that makes a huge deal out
of every little piddling elementary-school event. Unless the kids
are in actual comas, they always "respond enthusiastically" to
whatever the school is doing. If the reporter quotes kids talking
about how stupid and boring the event is, the editor will cut that
out.
Learning about things is kind of the idea behind
school.
Why does a first grader need to know about drug paraphernalia?
Why does a first grader need to know about drug
paraphernalia?
Plenty. You have to get those young, nimble fingers working on
rolling a blunt as soon as possible. You think this stuff comes
naturally?
Jennifer, you're such a cynic. Why, I remember fondly Burn Your Teacher in Effigy Day in third grade. Ah, memories. Too bad that they don't do that anymore. Turned out that most third graders didn't, in fact, know the word, "effigy". Tragic.
Dan T, I referred to "average to above average middle school student". These youngsters know that "Vengeance is mine, sayeth the bureaucrat."
Pro Libertate, I stopped taking part in school-spirit
special-dress days around fifth grade, except for my senior year of
high school during homecoming week, when everybody was supposed to
wear black because we were "in mourning" for the other school's
football team (our team was supposedly going to kick their team's
collective butt).
Anyway, I'd just entered my wear-black-every-day phase a few months
before, but on Mourning Day I switched to all white. Which was
prophetic, as our school's football team got totally trounced in
that night's game, as it had in every other game it played in for
the past decade or so.
Even though I homeschool, I make sure to have at least one
"Fuck Drugs in the Ass" day every semester.
Best drug awareness day. Ever.
Jennifer - the kinda paper that tells you who won the
pumpkin-pie baking contest? The kinda paper that has the same exact
ad for the local hardware store every week for 20 years? The kinda
paper that is used to start fires all winter?
I love small towns. Not like I've ever lived in one, or
anything...I just crave the whiff of homeliness I get when we go on
vacation and pick up the local papers.
They're lucky to have you on staff!
Jennifer,
Nothing like a toga. If it were up to me, that would be the next
big style. Real togas, mind you, not sheets.
"Hey, watch the snide comments. Teachers and administrators in
the public school system have all been to college. Many have
masters degrees. Surely they have empirical evideence to support
that this kind of IDIOCY reduces drug usage."
Dude, they're like, EXPERTS. If you've read joe's posts, the fact
that they are experts is all you need to know. They are OBVIOUSLY
right.
Oh, crap. You told me to watch the snide comments. Sorry!
It occurs to me suddenly that to be a teacher today who disagrees with our current drug policy could be a very scary thing. For some reason, making kids dress up like this in support of government policies seems sort of fascist somehow. Maybe I'm overreacting, but this story has just creeped me out more and more over the last couple of hours.
I'd simply like to object to the characterization of French Maid
fanciers as pedophiles. There's a time honored body of work
glorifying this mode of Francophilic domestic habiliment, and I
don't ever remember that connection.
Zut alors!
I just hope that in the course of shopping for Mossy Oak duds, our
youth in the Commonwealth have a chance to learn some real
information about the Mossberg 500s probably sitting in a case not
far from the vests.
That's pretty much it, Bee. Someimes on an extra-slow news day, me and the photographer go to some scenic locale and he takes pretty pictures while I wax poetic about how pretty the place is. Sometimes these articles generate great controversy, as when I mention the existence of litter.
I would like to suggest a day where the teachers dress in togas or French maid uniforms. Stevo Darkly Day.
How about a Turn In Your Dope Smoking Friends Day; kid could dress up to look like this...
BEE ponders: It occurs to me suddenly that to be a teacher today
who disagrees with our current drug policy could be a very scary
thing.
SH: Could be, but it's certainly less scary if you unite with
like-minded educators.
Educators For Sensible Drug Policy www.efsdp.org
Look, kids, at least most boys, love to play war. So ask them to
dress up in camouflage to battle the ____ war and of course you are
going to find enthusiastic little warriors (did they get to paint
their faces, too?...maybe that has to wait for college football
games). You could declare a war on garden slugs, on people who lack
color coordination, on sugar free toothpaste and you'd get the same
effect.
But don't worry, one of these kids is bound to have a 'near
collision' with another one in this battle so the nonsense should
soon end.
Ah, Stevo, my man, I like the cut of your jib... (are you goat-footed by any chance?) But I would like to suggest that every day be "toga or french maid day"...
I spent a year subbing in the public schools. One elementary
school had a buddy day where you were suppose to dress like your
buddy. I thought that was kind of cute. A high school had a 'wear
your pajamas to school day' which I also thought was kind of cute
(I'm sensing a Jack Handy joke coming....) though if I were in high
school I'm not sure how I would have reacted.
Personally, I always wanted to have an 'ugly shoe day' but after
hearing Stevo's ideas I think I am turned.
On another note, a friend of mine, much more pro-state than I am,
told me the other day I should be grateful for the all the good
things, regulations, etc. the government has provided us. But when
I read these things about the schools, I think that he should be
grateful that not all of society in America is government
controlled. I guess the retort would be, "well, the private sector
produces just as much silliness." Possibly true, but the upside is
that if you don't like something in the marketplace, at the local
Mason's lodge, or in your church, you can always opt out or start a
new business, wacky men's club, or church, i.e. "Ramblin' Man's
Ugly Shoe Temple."
How about "France Day" where the students burn their teacher's cars?
How are kids supposed to learn if they're just lying there
inert?
That sounds like the normal state of students in school, yes.
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