Nope. Big Nope.
Why does someone have to wear purple hair and have nose rings or wear long finger nails?
Because they can and they want to. What business is it of yours when it doesn't affect operational perfomance?
When I joined in 1990, lots of people wore long hair (heavy metal music was still popular), people cut their damn hair if they wanted to join the CAF. SImple concept.
Sure; and that was unreasonable at the time, and would continue to be unreasonable now. Because long hair doesn't make someone worse at the job. Especially if the "long hair" would only be considered too long if it's attached to a man instead of a woman.
Show me WHY someone has to have their pretty hair colour or some other silly nonsense. Go for it. You,
@btrudy , sell it to me.
Because they want to, and it's none of our damned business otherwise if it doesn't affect operational performance.
Did you get the part about the "me, me, me" mentality? Nope you blew right over it. Thats the ultimate failure in your reasoning and I assume your an officer? Us former NCO and WO types pay attention to our soldiers mind sets. What is their ultimate aim, etc.
If the ultimate aim is to serve Canada in Her Majesty's Canadian Armed Forces, then all other choices they make with regards to personal appearance are irrelevant, to the extent that they don't negative impact operational capability, which of course these dress instruction updates still take care of.
What the hell makes YOU think that someone who wants uniform standards that have nothing to do with 1950s christian standards and for F sakes, knock it off with "cis" male terminology. Its a BS made up word.
... the dress standards were drafted back then, to suit contemporary (at the time) aesthetic ideals of what a "proper" Eurocentric Christian male-focused ideal was. Looking like that is no better or worse than any of the myriad of other possible choices; it's a cultural construct, and thus should not ever be viewed as if it's part of some even remotely objective criteria.
But the fact that the institution latched onto those aesthetics, and forbade any others, has continually made it a worse place for anyone who isn't naturally inclined to follow said aesthetics. It inherently creates one group, for which the standard was designed, which is an "in-group", and excludes all others who might want anything else, whether that desire stems from reasons of personal preference, cultural practices (recent or traditional) or religious obligation.
That group you speak of is society. The people who are pushing all these new regs for "inclusivity" are the noisy minority.
I think you seem to be failing to grasp the point that these changes are being implemented, to quote the CFCWO, "to better reflect the changing tastes of the Canadian society we serve".
Society has moved on from the notion that everyone needs to look like a proper English gentleman. So should we.