Time to Ban Denim Jeans

By Southwest Nationalist. It is a fact which cannot have escaped many — the huge number of young men who are involved in criminal actions, on some occasions violence, who wear denim jeans.

The link is almost inescapable. Look outside and busy pub or club at chucking out time, and among those heckling and tussling with each-other, most in various states of inebriation, many if not all will be wearing jeans. Look for yourself at football match violence, jeans again.

In recognition of this fact one would think that there is substantial evidence to suggest that the banning of denim jeans in all public places would be highly beneficial to the social order and wellbeing of the UK as a whole.

By bringing in such a ban the disorder on our streets and the crime rate would drop drastically.

Youth, instead of strutting around in baggy jeans that hang down so far you could probably throw a dart in there and hit the bullseye, would be forced to wear trousers, just like the law abiding and hard working older generations.

Instead of being divided from the rest of society by their choice of clothing which marks them out as young and different, they would become a better integrated and less intimidating part of our society.

The changes which such a clothing change could bring might well be astonishing. Imagine it, instead of going out on a Saturday night wearing his jeans, getting drunk, and looking for a fight and kebab on the way home, young Jack Average may become a regular sight wearing cords and helping out the local elderly on their allotments.

Instead of loitering on street corners, playing nervously with whatever pointy object hides in his deep pockets whilst looking for someone to mug, young Joe Normal might suddenly develop an interest in computing and work to acquire a skill in programming should he be forced to ditch those baggy jeans and don a nice pair of cotton slacks.

By now you’re wondering what this writer has been taking today and probably thinking of calling for the men in white coats – but, hold on a minute, there is a serious point about to come.

Everything I’ve written above is rubbish, none of this will happen just because jeans are banned, it won’t alter people’s behaviour one bit.

Now, look around Europe, where Burka bans seem to be becoming the trend, with Italy the latest nation to pass draft legislation which would see the burka outlawed.

Are our denim jeans beginning to make sense now?

You can ban denim jeans — or burkas — and it will make no difference whatsoever to the fundamental, underlying problems. They will still exist, just they will be clad in different clothing.

A ban on the burka is cosmetic only.

Anyone thinking it will in any way solve the problems which the West faces from Islam, other than removing the visual spectacle of streets thronging with women clad in burkas, is very much mistaken.

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3 Comments

  1. All very true, the underlying causes would not be addressed by such a ban, but I can’t believe I am the only one who thinks many many people dress worse today with more money in real terms than they did in times of far less.
    I’m sick to death of seeing an ever increasing number who show themselves to have no sense of self esteem by the manner in which they dress. Can we legislate about that, of course not, but part of what Nationalism is about is pride and self respect both of which are now sorely lacking.

  2. Jeans are a style of trousers designed for working in. They are denoted by the use of patch pockets and rivets for strength. Some of these things are made from blue denim, some from other types of weave and varying materials. I have a pair made from ‘foundry cloth’, sort of a yucky brown colour and very nice they are too! Two other pairs are made from a sort of heavy chino, also very smart. Now here’s the crunch, I have a pair of trousers, ie with proper pockets and no rivets that are made from blue denim, these too are very smart indeed. So where can we draw the line with this. Certainly I do not any longer possess any traditional blue jeans, but if I did I would not turn into some sort of hooligan because if it.

    We do not need to ban what they wear, we have to get inside the minds of the people that this article complains about, they need educating, but in order to educate them they need a purpose in life, a situation that has come about because of PC and globalisation. Britain, as a country, has lost its way, and that is the basis of most of our problems.

  3. Absolutely correct, banning the Burkah is cosmetic, and the elites know this, sad that so many will fall for this thinking that at at last, the Govt is doing something, it’s window dressing only, playing with the deckchairs on a sinking ship.
    Banning the Burkah will not prevent our children becoming minorities within a few decades.
    Besides, Govt has no right telling people what they can and cannot wear.
    Of course it may suggest, and if TV programmes suddenly started showing the Indigenus behaving with more respect for themselves instead of the Jeremy Kyle, Big brother, east enders Brainwashing they are bombarded with now, some of it might rub off on them.
    Of course that will not happen until we elect a Nationalist Govt that will promote National pride in our people.

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