I love this part.If the facility provides no suitable accommodation and no unused chair is handy, a gentleman is justified in leaving it on, at a rakish angle proportionate with his degree of displeasure."
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I love this part.If the facility provides no suitable accommodation and no unused chair is handy, a gentleman is justified in leaving it on, at a rakish angle proportionate with his degree of displeasure."
You're conflating what people wear and how they feel about it with the downfall of western civilization. That's a stretch. I work with lots of teens and young adults who would fail, abjectly, any social etiquette test you'd like to give them, yet they work evenings and weekends on their homework; make a point of spending time with their families; participate weekly in projects to improve the lives of the less fortunate; dedicate themselves to causes larger than their own lives; and otherwise work in countless large and small ways to make the world better for everyone around them. Maybe they don't know which fork to use, and maybe their pants sag, or maybe they're on their cell phones all the time; if you focus on these issues alone, HH, you're right: we're going to hell in a handbasket. But you'd also miss the far bigger point, and that is that people are working very much against this "bad for culture and bad for civilization" attitude you think they carry. So I might groan when I notice my son not hold the door for someone--but he can be taught that. What he has already learned--that this world is worth working for, and the people around him are worth working for--that's a far better lesson.
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You're conflating what people wear and how they feel about it with the downfall of western civilization. That's a stretch. I work with lots of teens and young adults who would fail, abjectly, any social etiquette test you'd like to give them, yet they work evenings and weekends on their homework; make a point of spending time with their families; participate weekly in projects to improve the lives of the less fortunate; dedicate themselves to causes larger than their own lives; and otherwise work in countless large and small ways to make the world better for everyone around them. Maybe they don't know which fork to use, and maybe their pants sag, or maybe they're on their cell phones all the time; if you focus on these issues alone, HH, you're right: we're going to hell in a handbasket. But you'd also miss the far bigger point, and that is that people are working very much against this "bad for culture and bad for civilization" attitude you think they carry. So I might groan when I notice my son not hold the door for someone--but he can be taught that. What he has already learned--that this world is worth working for, and the people around him are worth working for--that's a far better lesson.
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It's a symptom of a general attitude that is bad for business, bad for relationships, bad for culture and bad for civilization in general.
Your own words. And of course I went to my experience, just like you went to your experience; my experience is that there is every reason for hope for relationships, culture, and civilization.
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"I just wear mine. Sorry if it offends anyone."
"I've never been one for rules of etiquette...Comfort often dictates whether I wear a hat indoors."
"How can you show respect for people who don't know, care or even notice that you are wearing a hat in the first place?"
"Whoever made up the hat rules is long gone so isn't going to complain no matter what we do."
"anyone who would like to comment on my wearing of a hat anywhere I please can show some real etiquette and keep their opinions to themselves."
"I think that gives me the right to rewrite my own rule book."
"But who cares what etiquette says? I for one, wish etiquette would slip away and quietly die."
"Anything else is do as one may please around here!"
"If you know how infrequently people thought about you, you wouldn't worry about what they think about you."
All comments from this thread or others just like it. There are many more examples, both in regards to hats and fashion in general. "Do whatever you want, whether others like it or not" is a very common theme around here. I know there are lots of people who have their own style. I might not like it, just as they might not like mine. But to pointedly disregard common courtesy crosses a line for me. And it's not so much that I expect people to always take their hat off when they should, or tip their hat, or any other particular gesture. It's the attitude of "I'll do what I want, to heck with everyone else" that bothers me. It's a symptom of a general attitude that is bad for business, bad for relationships, bad for culture and bad for civilization in general.
I'm sorry, I don't see the connection between the quotes above and the idea that one does not or should not "care what other people think of you."
Do I care if person x, y, or z is offended if I keep my hat on in an indoor space? Given that the convention in the modern day doesn't place weight on hat etiquette; no
I answered that statement directly, but I'll repeat it: I love working with teens and young adults, and I see tremendous positivity, energy, and enthusiasm in them, your attempts at psychoanalyzing me aside.I never said there wasn't. I said certain attitudes and behavior are bad for it.
And you're dodging the point about teens and young people.
Obviously we don't see the same thing.
And this sums up the attitude with which I have a problem. First being that I think you're wrong about whether or not any weight on etiquette, and secondly, your indifference to offending people.
Yes, you're dodging the point about the distinction I'm making.
I'm not indifferent to offending people. I'm indifferent to offending people to hold onto irrelevant notions of what constitutes "etiquette" and "common courtesy" that are outside of the accepted norm.
Yes, I understand you believe that everybody is silently going around lamenting all the heads on everybody's head; but I think that's contrary to what the very meaning of "etiquette" means.
I answered that statement directly, but I'll repeat it: I love working with teens and young adults, and I see tremendous positivity, energy, and enthusiasm in them, your attempts at psychoanalyzing me aside.
And fine, you don't see changes in behavior as being ultimately destructive even though you seem them as short-term corrosive. In that way, you echo the empty, cliche criticism of the next generation by the previous generation that stretches back to the beginning of recorded time.
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