BYU Swim Camp - No racers (briefs) allowed!

I've been giggling about this all morning! Many of the young swimmers from my pool are attending the BYU swim camps starting this week. One of the young guys who always wears brief (racer) style swim suits told me that he isn't allowed to where them at the camp. I pulled up the info on the camp and the info packet does say "no Speedos or bikini briefs are allowed for male participants". I'm sorry, but jammers are no less revealing than briefs! If anything they are more so - in my opinion. I can understand a modest dress code at BYU, but swimmers are so use to seeing each other in these types of suits. I would love to know the thinking behind this dress code? :lmao:
Parents
  • Please cite your sources on the money speedo gave FINA. I don't want to hear another story out of you about how you just know, like how you just know about swimming despite not being a swimmer. Name the source, quote the figure. And, it's pretty much fitting that you use a toilet manufacturer in Japan to speak to swim suits. At least we know the crapper is your frame of reference. Using your logic, powered flight wasn't a technological advance since Da Vinci envisioned it hundreds of years ago. So, just to clarify your argument, using state of the art technology to produce a state of the art product is not a technological advance?
Reply
  • Please cite your sources on the money speedo gave FINA. I don't want to hear another story out of you about how you just know, like how you just know about swimming despite not being a swimmer. Name the source, quote the figure. And, it's pretty much fitting that you use a toilet manufacturer in Japan to speak to swim suits. At least we know the crapper is your frame of reference. Using your logic, powered flight wasn't a technological advance since Da Vinci envisioned it hundreds of years ago. So, just to clarify your argument, using state of the art technology to produce a state of the art product is not a technological advance?
Children
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