Stupid Nationalist Tricks: Assimililation vs. Integration
The question here isn’t security. It’s universality. To play a sport
in an official manner, under the auspices of any governing body (as
opposed to doing it with your buddies in the back alley), also means
abiding by the rules, including the regulations about the uniform. When
it comes to soccer, this means the shoes have to respect some criteria.
Players must wear shorts and a jersey with sleeves, matching the team’s
colours. Jewelry is forbidden. Can one wear flip-flops, tennis shoes or
cowboy boots? No. Can one wear a tank top, jeans, or play shirts and
skins? No. Can one wear a turban, a baseball cap or ski goggles? No. Are
these rules, common to all soccer federations in the world through
FIFA, there to put constraints on the players’ freedoms of religion or
expression? No. They are there to ensure everyone’s safety, sure, but
also to ensure the uniformity and universality of the game, and also the
sense of belonging to one’s team. This is important.
http://www2.macleans.ca/2013/06/11/the-case-for-the-quebec-soccer-turban-ban/
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