Why Looks Are The Last Baston Of Discrimination Essay

893 Words2 Pages

Should businesses have to answer to legislation for wanting their employees to look a certain way? Deborah L. Rhode is an author with quite a compelling argument. In her article “Why Looks Are the Last Baston of Discrimination” Rhode talks about how looks are a form of modern discrimination. So, the ultimate question is, ‘Should the U.S pass legislation protecting physical appearances from discrimination?’. Rhode states various encounters that display. However, there are many issues of this possible law, one cannot be defined as ugly because people have different ideas of beauty. This legislation could change how certain jobs pick certain employees, or what people get what jobs. Looks-based discrimination should be legally protected but, it would be very challenging to enforce such a law. Legislative action on the protection of physical appearance …show more content…

Per Rhode, Nikki Youngblood was a high school lesbian in 2001 who was denied a photo because “she simply wanted to appear in her yearbook as herself, not as a fluffed-up stereotype of what school administration thought she should look like” (Rhode 246). Tampa high school tried to make Youngblood wear a dress for her photo, and if she did not her photo would not be in the yearbook (Rhodes 246). Youngblood’s story demonstrate how she was treated differently only because of her looks, and the fact that Youngblood wanted to wear clothes she felt comfortable in rather than a dress. If there was a law protecting looks this would not have happened, and Nikki Youngblood would have been in her yearbook wearing her own clothes. The fact that Youngblood was denied a photo is not right because that is equivalent to the school punishing her for who she is. If this law is not put into effect, there could be more cases like this where people are not allowed to be themselves due to other people’s idea of

Open Document