Sunday, September 20, 2009

Canadian School bans Skateboards from School Property

Skateboarding is a very simple sport. You have a piece of wood with wheels attached to it, but its getting increasingly hard to do this. It's like the world's out to get us. They keep coming up with new ways to stop skaters from doing what they love. Thousands of skate stoppers are installed every day and with ever increasing numbers, there's just not very much to go around.
But skating can't, and won't, be silenced. As long as we have hammers, there will be a way to skate what was previously "stopped" spots. There are way too many of us to be silenced, we might not all get along but we all have a similar cause. But as i mentioned before there are forces uniting against our will to skate. For instance
, here's an article about a school in Canada that has banned skateboards from school property.


Skateboard ban prompts student petition

A Calgary high school has banned skateboards from the property, upsetting hundreds of students who have signed a petition.

The principal from St. Francis High School wasn’t available for an interview, but Catholic school board spokeswoman Janet Sutherland said safety concerns were behind the decision.

"There is a district-wide policy that states that skateboards cannot be used on school property and some schools have gone a step further to make it their policy that skateboards cannot be brought to school," she said.

Liza-Jane Karieter, a Grade 12 student, said a skateboard cuts her commute by a third.

"It's fun just to go down hills and just go extremely fast, and if you fall off, then whatever, you fall off, you get back up and do it again."

Students who skateboard said the rule singles them out since it doesn't apply to bikes or inline skates.

"We're troublemakers or whatever you want to call them,” Karieter said. “I don't think it should be like that."

John Maitland, a Grade 12 student, said he isn’t allowed to even bring his skateboard into the school and put it in his locker.

"The rule is you're not allowed to take it in and put it under your arm because it's a weapon,” he said. "All I want is so that I can be able to pick it up and put it in my locker, so that I can go to school faster and leave school faster, even if they just made amendments to the rule."

The students have a petition with more than 800 names, but Sutherland says the policy is not up for review.

"They're in place for a reason so students may not like the policy, but it is there for their safety,” she said.


How fucked up is that? The word is out to make us look like bad guys. A lot of people on use them for transportation, what these people are doing is a form of discrimination, and it's just because we ride around on a piece of wood? Now you can see why some skaters are all like, "Stick it to the man!". It's because the man is trying to stick it to us, so I say, fuck the establishment.

2 comments:

  1. The interesting thing to me is that even though as you point out, skateboards are not much more than some wheels stuck to a piece of wood, the multi-million dollar industry (or industries?) that have sprung up around it. Tony Hawk, X games (they skate in the X games, don't they?)...all this stuff makes MONEY and is legit. I don't see how they're "weapons," as the Canadian student says they've been labeled.

    Beyond your comment about hammers, and your last sentence, though, I'd like to hear more about your ideas for "skateboard resistance."

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  2. the hammers are for getting rid of skate stoppers, i forgot to elaborate on that, sorry

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