To be fair, this shit has been happening going back to before we were born, but only recently it's been covered in the media, usually under the guise of sexism (which is stupid).
Some teachers and administrators are hypersensitive to girls showing up to school in tight or semi-provocative clothing, and then either send them home to change, or force them to cover up with clothing belonging to the school.
Personally I think it's all BS, and not for the "my body, my freedom, stop valuing boys over me" crap being pushed by feminists and SJWs.
I just think it's a victimless situation. If the girl enjoys or doesn't mind the attention, and the boys enjoy looking at her, then who is it harming?
Some schools don't even allow girls to wear leggings unless they have a skirt or dress over them, which would upset me to no end if I were a high school boy today.
I don't think you'll find a single heterosexual male adult who wishes his high school was more strict with the female dress code.
In this particular case, the chick with the nipples isn't very likable in the article.
Ugh.
She also posted this very misleading picture of herself, showing the outfit in question:
Yeah, take the picture from a distance, in the shadow of a doorway, wearing no makeup, with your hair looking like you just woke up in the morning. I'm sure that's exactly what you looked like at school.
Other pics on this girl's twitter show that she doesn't normally look like this, so she tried to make herself look as dowdy as possible (and make the nipple protrusion look nonexistent), so as to convince the reader she wasn't trying to look sexy.
Uh huh.
Look, if you want to go to high school with no bra and fight for your right to have boys stare at you, I'm on board. If you're going to frame this as a gender oppression issue and then create a false picture of what you really looked like at the time, then you're not being honest with yourself or with us.