- Joined
- Feb 27, 2008
- Messages
- 18,596
- Reaction score
- 1,766
Peak Teutonic cuisine?Cabbage turnip with ground meat and whip cream.
Peak Teutonic cuisine?Cabbage turnip with ground meat and whip cream.
It's not really a concession on anything but professionalism. What constitutes "natural" hair, and should there be any limits on it, whether it's a black guy with a 3 foot afro, or a white guy with hair down to their ass? When is it okay to ask them to look professional and cut it, because they have a business meeting coming up, and appearances do matter?
Is it just a free for all now?
link to this hair thread? I might stir the drinkNatural black hair isn't unprofessional.
If you knew how much time some of these hairstyles took for maintenance, you might reconsider what exactly constitutes unprofessional. A white guy with 3 feet long hair is not the same as a black guy with a high flat top. That comparison is just asinine, yet people make the connection out of nothing more than wanting to control what other people are doing.
I don't know the specifics of the law and I bet details like that will be hashed out in court over the years. But no I don't think its a free for all, I think all it means is that a company cannot deem a protective hairstyle inherently unprofessional. That doesn't mean that you can get away with a crazy hairstyle just because it happens to be a protective one as well. So if you have rainbow colored cornrows that can probably be deemed unprofessional but not merely on the basis of being cornrows. Or for instance if there's a rule that limits the length of a man's hair that should also apply to protective hairstyles for black men but they should be allowed to have such hairstyles so long as they're within the rules, they shouldn't be categorically deemed unprofessional.It's not really a concession on anything but professionalism. What constitutes "natural" hair, and should there be any limits on it, whether it's a black guy with a 3 foot afro, or a white guy with hair down to their ass? When is it okay to ask them to look professional and cut it, because they have a business meeting coming up, and appearances do matter?
Is it just a free for all now?
link to this hair thread? I might stir the drink
Can't just post normal porn, gotta go grossing everyone out in the process.Well at least he doesn't seem to have a thing for scat porn, which seems unusually common here.
@HereticBD
![]()
This was an example of a hairstyle that's supposedly unprofessional, and the comparison pic was some dude with just a raw unstyled grow.
Just looking at this guy's lineup tells me he's meticulous about his hair's appearance. You don't get that from just letting your shit grow for a month.
This appears to back my belief that Japanese is an extremely easy language to learn relative to most others. With less information per syllable, there is less need to understand complex background context, unlike say, colloquial English which now has expressions such as "because reasons." On the other hand, I know absolutely nothing about Vietnamese, but looking at that chart, I don't think I will attempt to learn it at this late stage.More evidence Vietnamese is God's language.
Why are some languages spoken faster than others?
https://www.economist.com/graphic-d...prGllxqSn4XRkVGvn6NO-PJv7gAllL-kIh6WxMkUwOyTk
![]()
New research suggests that different tongues, regardless of speed, transmit information at roughly the same rate
Graphic detail
Sep 28th 2019
WERE THIS article written in Japanese, it would be longer. A Thai translation, meanwhile, would be shorter. And yet those reading it aloud, in either language or in its original English, would finish at roughly the same time. This peculiar phenomenon is the subject of new research which finds that languages face a trade-off between complexity and speed. Those packed with information are spoken slower, while simpler ones are spoken faster. As a result, most languages are equally efficient at conveying information.
In a study published this month in Science Advances, Christophe Coupé, Yoon Mi Oh, Dan Dediu and François Pellegrino start by quantifying the information density of 17 Eurasian languages, as measured by the ease with which each syllable can be guessed based on the preceding one. Next, they record the rate at which 170 native speakers read 15 texts out loud. Finally, armed with data about the information contained in a piece of text and the speed at which it can be spoken, the authors derive the rate at which information is communicated.
A dude shows up with that hairstyle to work for my team, and I'm not hiring him. That goes for a white dude with a fresh mohawk too. It's just not happening.
Natural black hair isn't unprofessional.
If you knew how much time some of these hairstyles took for maintenance, you might reconsider what exactly constitutes unprofessional. A white guy with 3 feet long hair is not the same as a black guy with a high flat top. That comparison is just asinine, yet people make the connection out of nothing more than wanting to control what other people are doing.
mate he called dreadlocks lazy, don't bother lolNatural black hair isn't unprofessional.
If you knew how much time some of these hairstyles took for maintenance, you might reconsider what exactly constitutes unprofessional. A white guy with 3 feet long hair is not the same as a black guy with a high flat top. That comparison is just asinine, yet people make the connection out of nothing more than wanting to control what other people are doing.
I do think visible piercings and tattoos are unprofessional though. For me if its a tattoo you can cover up with a short sleeve shirt its fine. So basically, no neck tats or sleeves/forearm tats.
Someone want to plan a with me?I hate this fucking world.
https://www.riverfronttimes.com/new...Cj6AYSArdnoWSCBU_CBPYcJPYkU3R0FEi-J2Hg6K0Be-k
@Gregolian @Fawlty
It depends. Just like natural white hair. Like I said, a 3 foot afro is "natural". Is it not okay to ask the guy to trim it down so he's not such an eyesore?
Just because it takes time and skill for certain styles, it doesn't mean they are professional looking in all settings. A punker spiked out style takes time and effort. It doesn't make it professional.
"Professional" is subjective anyways, which is part of my point. Are companies not allowed to have any standards on appearances at all now, because there is no actual definitive term of "professional looking"? Just let it all hang out, and try to close deals with Willie Nelson, and Kid n Play in your entourage?
*i'm only 1/4 black, not kinky but super wavy haired and in my youth the thought of dreads crossed my mind. looking into the work and maintence shut that shit down QUICKmate he called dreadlocks lazy, don't bother lol
i'm only
Its one thing to set standards that can be enforced upon both whites and blacks and another to simply say that hairstyles that are better suited for black people are inherently unprofessional.It depends. Just like natural white hair. Like I said, a 3 foot Afro is "natural". Is it not okay to ask the guy to trim it down so he's not such an eyesore?
Why do you jump to three foot afros as if the scope of hairstyles under question isn't exponentially wider?
mate he called dreadlocks lazy, don't bother lol
i'm only


I probably wouldn't want to work for you, tbh.
I got my first corporate job with dreadlocks literally down to the small of my back. Judging someone based on their hairstyle is a great way of telling people you're not very good at assessing their talent.
As a talented individual, any organization that can't recognize my talent isn't somewhere I'd care to be. Y'all have a funny way of misusing assets.