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Only if you consider the ACLU to be political.
Only if you consider the ACLU to be political.
Wait, what - hang on. You actually think people should be compelled by law to take behaviour-altering medication if they deviate from a to-down, established conceptualisation of normality? Now, please don't think I'm holding the thread off-topic, because actually lot's of people hold this view but to think that would solve the problems of people who get mocked for wearing a hat? Now that is crazy. More likely hat wearers would end up institutionalised and medicated as well.
Or was this a joke I didn't get?
Sorry, wiseguy, I was joking. I lived in Italy for several months many years ago. I felt like I was taking my life in my hands every time I took to the roadways. It is a tough place to drive for sure, particularly in Rome where drivers speed down one way streets in the wrong direction.
I. Plus as someone else said earlier, two world wars wiped out most of the decent gentlemen or at least made a big enough generation gap and our culture of respect wasn't passed on to the next generation.
Maybe that's it. I would say though that in my opinion, in the U.S. contemporary hat wearing is not a continuation of tradition, but a new discovery. It took fifty years of hat absence for it to become cool again, assuming that now it's cool. Now we're free to re-discover all of the virtues of fedoras as if for the first time. I know I feel that way. Turning to the problem of what to say, although I haven't been mocked yet (I'm 57 and somewhat beyond mocking; mockers save their mockery for those their own age), when it happens I plan to say, "don't like my bodacious hat, eh?" They're free to not like my hats. But my real position is, I don't much care, if I'm convinced the hat works on me. If it works it works, and mockers be darned like socks.
Don't want to stray too far from topic, but that is not the case according to the NIMH: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/statistics/SMI_AASR.shtml <-- shows less than 5% of all Americans have serious mental health issues.
Only if you consider the ACLU to be political.
There is a Cornell Study from 2000 that looks at mental health in the work place that places depression at about 1 on in 10.
"Yearly, in the US, approximately one in ten adults experiences a depressive disorder."
Nearly one out of ten people in public has some serious mental health issues and since in the US the ACLU has made it so they can't legally be compelled to take their meds, we all suffer because of it.
You tell me. From their mission statement:
"The ACLU's stated mission is "to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in this country by the Constitution and laws of the United States."
Yes it is very political. The political nature of the ACLU derives from its selection of the rights and liberties to be defended. They do not defend rights that do not appeal to them such as gun ownership rights. It picks and chooses the rights it wishes to defend and is, for that reason, political.
I seem to always get a big reaction when wearing a hat, no matter what type of hat it is and no matter what I'm wearing with it. I live in London where people haven't worn hats very much since WWII (I note that even New Yorkers wore fedoras in the 50s). In Britain hats became an expensive luxury during a time of post-war recession and rationing.
It seems that people here feel compelled to comment when someone wears a hat nowadays and I'm interested to know how you respond to the negative feedback. I xas in Oxford the other day wearing my grey homburg and grey 3 piece suit and a 40ish man riding a bicycle stopped and exclaimed "oh my God, what DO you look like?" And then called me a few choice words which I can't use on the Lounge. This happens to me quite often.
Does this happen to anyone else and how do you respond?
... the ACLU has long taken the position that the Second Amendment protects a collective right rather than an individual right. ...