People who work for and who belong to institutions have one thing in common: they all wear uniforms. Uniforms are dress codes, usually distinct in style, clothing and even color that can make the wearer easily identifiable not only to his peers but also to other people.
Take for example the military personnel who are all clad in fatigues, except for some who have their own distinctive brand of clothing like those in the navy or other branches of the military. But no matter what, most of them can be identified through the use of fatigue or what they call seven colors.
Then there are those who belong to the medical profession who generally wear white not only for their laboratory coats but for their daily hospital wear. Doctors and nurses all wear white but nurses are given more freedom in wearing other colors.
Even students of particular schools are required to wear uniforms to make them identifiable as students of a certain school. So why do people generally wear uniforms?
People are required to wear uniforms because it is a sign of conformity or being one within a certain group. Conformity means the person who wears the uniform is a bona fide...