Photos, exposing the body | Censoring 80 girls in the textbook:

Photos, exposing the body |  Censoring 80 girls in the textbook:

Both parents and students are angry.

New York (Netavisen): – I couldn’t believe they had printed an annual book like this, says 15-year-old Riley O’Keefe, a student at Bartram Trail High School In Florida to CNN.

The 15-year-old was shocked when she looked at the school yearbook and saw that her image had been manipulated or censored by placing a black line across the gap in the photo.

Also read: TV star criticized for “inappropriate image” with her husband |

80 girls were censored

– And when I flipped the yearbook, I saw more and more girls who had their breasts adjusted, she told CNN.

Read also

– Expelled because the shorts are too short

In total, pictures of about 80 girls in the yearbook have been altered or censored.

See more photos and examples at the bottom of the case.

Now there are more, students and parents, raging against the solution the school settled on.

Also read: A girl (17 years old) is ineligible to show too much buttocks

Bartram Trail High School He has clear rules about how students should dress, but the school inspector, Tim Forson, admits that was a mistake.

“It is unfortunate to comment on the photo incident in connection with the Bartram Trail High School Yearbook,” Forson wrote on CNN.

Read also

TV star criticized for “inappropriate image” with her husband |

Of course, there was no intention at all to embarrass or “shame” some of the students because of the clothes they were wearing. We have all now learned a lesson that contemplates the importance of process and understanding and that intent is not always the result, he wrote for CNN.

See also  Stoltenberg at the NHO conference: - Arms are the way to peace in Ukraine

Also read: – Expelled because the shorts are too short

Here you can see more examples of photos that were banned in the yearbook:

Advertising

10 best summer games for adults

By Bond Robertson

"Organizer. Social media geek. General communicator. Bacon scholar. Proud pop culture trailblazer."