I'm sorry but a school has to have an ethos which is at some limit inflexible.It must also have rules which are similar.
Which is why I said regarding rules and laws that:
'That we might disagree with them (and can campaign to change them), but cannot expect to break them without sanction.'
Teaching to critique? Pupils instinctively know how to critique but need to be taught temperance in this since people have a knack of bringing stuff down for the sake of it
Yes critique - which is completely different to 'bringing stuff down
for the sake of it'. Kids need to learn to think, to critique, to reason. If they disagree with something to be able to cogently argue why - if they agree with something to be able to cogently argue why. And the best way to do this is to learn to critique - a common approach being to ask kids to argue for or against an ethical point, regardless of whether they actually agree or disagree with that point.
Finally we come to law where there are no concessions made.
Which is why I said regarding rules and laws that:
'That we might disagree with them (and can campaign to change them), but cannot expect to break them without sanction.'
Maybe you didn't bother to read my post before replying.