I really don't care. I don't see a reason why she should be allowed to?
Graduations are not exactly about the individual, your CLASS graduates (you do too but there is a reason everyone is dressed the same other than some of the honors).
She can put it on after graduation for pictures or something. If you allow this then eventually you will have niggers wanting to be blinged out mostly naked or having sagging pants because of "culture".
Archive: https://archive.today/kamKE
From the post:
>Zephira Arguello dreams of walking down the aisle at her high school graduation ceremony in a way that honors her accomplishment and culture.
Even more, the Kelly Walsh High School senior wants to promote “acceptance.”
That word is emblazoned on a wall outside her school.
The 18-year-old moved to Casper with her family from Riverton in 2022 and believes being dressed for success on her May 30 graduation day should involve wearing a nearly 100-year-old buckskin dress under her gown, moccasins her grandmother wore on her feet, and a beaded graduation cap.
But Kelly Walsh High School says no, there’s a problem with that. And Arguello and her father, Waylon Arguello, say they don’t understand the school district’s reasoning behind shutting out their culture.
I really don't care. I don't see a reason why she should be allowed to?
Graduations are not exactly about the individual, your CLASS graduates (you do too but there is a reason everyone is dressed the same other than some of the honors).
She can put it on after graduation for pictures or something. If you allow this then eventually you will have niggers wanting to be blinged out mostly naked or having sagging pants because of "culture".
Archive: https://archive.today/kamKE
From the post:
>>Zephira Arguello dreams of walking down the aisle at her high school graduation ceremony in a way that honors her accomplishment and culture.
Even more, the Kelly Walsh High School senior wants to promote “acceptance.”
That word is emblazoned on a wall outside her school.
The 18-year-old moved to Casper with her family from Riverton in 2022 and believes being dressed for success on her May 30 graduation day should involve wearing a nearly 100-year-old buckskin dress under her gown, moccasins her grandmother wore on her feet, and a beaded graduation cap.
But Kelly Walsh High School says no, there’s a problem with that. And Arguello and her father, Waylon Arguello, say they don’t understand the school district’s reasoning behind shutting out their culture.
(post is archived)