Frothingslosh
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- Oct 17, 2012
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Yeah, I completely missed the 'multiple choice' part too!
Because of their potential customers??????? plus the tattoos have been in the past a visual sign that you are a BAD boy, Probably Dangerous and one to stay away form. Nowdays, so many kids have them, it is hard to tell who is the bad guys. Will tell you this, 95% of the jails in the US houses prisoners who have multiple tattoos and very few people who do not. Go Figure.
100% of convicted criminals in the UK are human... Flippin humans, lets ban them from starbucks... oh wait! Don't waste time making up rules to protect against people that have not yet done wrong, its stupid and people that want to do wrong will always find a way to do wrong, no matter the silly rules silly people make up.
Latest Update:
http://fortune.com/2014/09/17/walmart-starbucks-dress-code/
Looks like Retention cost (of re-hiring) is one of the larger drivers for considering this policy.
Here is a youtube video to help people with a fear of the number 666 on the forehead or Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia.
(as discussed in having a tattoo with 666 several post earlier)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZT6RC0f-PhQ
I don't know why people think 666 is bad.
Had a girlfriend years ago who was 6 years 6 months and 6 days younger than me. Always remembered her birthday. That was a good thing. A good sweet young thing.
No weird comments about me being 18! No, I was well past 30 then.
That's the risk you run, I guess. I've heard people avoiding shops because the staff were the 'wrong' colour, the 'wrong' nationality, too messy, had the 'wrong' accent. There's always going to be someone who doesn't like something about the place. I'm assuming Starbucks is fully aware of their target demographic, or they wouldn't even mention this. People offended by tattoos of any sort must be such a low percentage that they're worth losing?But who decides which tattoos are offensive ? I might object to a religious tattoo just as much as you do a swashtika.
Brian
But who decides which tattoos are offensive ? I might object to a religious tattoo just as much as you do a swashtika.
Brian
I think that it is a bit glib to duck answering my question by saying that you cannot please everyone, you raised the issue of content.
The swastika , which what I presume you meant, is not offensive to some, Hindus and Buddhists spring to mind, and of course the Nazi symbol is a swastika turned clockwise 45 degrees. I have read and heard of Muslims being offended by the symbol of the cross, how widespread I don't know. I think your comment about it not being complex is a little simplistic.
Brian
Unless the Starbucks in in New Mexico, LOL Then it might lead to getting a job as a minority since it is the Good Luck symbol of the Navajo and Hopi tribes.
The guidelines might be tough and who would be the judge?
It was something like that leading to a lawsuit for a chain store called Hooters in the US. Something about consistent standards being applied to the workplace where skimpy uniforms were required on endowed women.
B.T.W. a block away from work (so I am told, that is my story and I am sticking to it... the story, not the Tilted Kilt ) there is the English version of Hooters called the Tilted Kilt. They claim "UK-inspired pub chain with kilt-clad waitresses serving fish 'n' chips & bar food. "
Thanks to this cultural site, we yanks didn't realize how very short those Kilts were suppose to be. My god, miniskirts were a return to the Victorian era. And, there is absolutely no question what is worn under a kilt after going to the Tilted Kilt (so I am told).This is our Western mental model for English Pubs.
B.T.W. no tattoos there at the Tilted Kilt either (so I am told). How do they set those standards?
Just google Denver 16th Street Mall and Tilted Kilt for photos for any further explanation.
Collectors Guide, swastika historyLeaving www.cabq.gov
"The swastika was a widely used Native American symbol. It was used by many southwestern tribes, most notably the Navajo. Among different tribes the swastika carried various meanings. To the Hopi it represented the wandering Hopi clans; to the Navajo it represented a whirling log ( tsil no'oli' ), a sacred image representing a legend that was used in healing rituals."
But, I digress.
Isn't it the Christ bit that should be 'pseudo'? I thought Jesus was just supposed to be his name?The number of Muslims that are offended by the Cross is about all of them. You see the cross represents Jesus Christ and in the Koran and the other two books of Islam, Jesus is a human but a psuedo-Jesus as opposed to the Bible. He is not the Son of God.
Isn't it the Christ bit that should be 'pseudo'? I thought Jesus was just supposed to be his name?
Unless the Starbucks in in New Mexico, LOL Then it might lead to getting a job as a minority since it is the Good Luck symbol of the Navajo and Hopi tribes.
The guidelines might be tough and who would be the judge?
It was something like that leading to a lawsuit for a chain store called Hooters in the US. Something about consistent standards being applied to the workplace where skimpy uniforms were required on endowed women.
B.T.W. a block away from work (so I am told, that is my story and I am sticking to it... the story, not the Tilted Kilt ) there is the English version of Hooters called the Tilted Kilt. They claim "UK-inspired pub chain with kilt-clad waitresses serving fish 'n' chips & bar food. "
Thanks to this cultural site, we yanks didn't realize how very short those Kilts were suppose to be. My god, miniskirts were a return to the Victorian era. And, there is absolutely no question what is worn under a kilt after going to the Tilted Kilt (so I am told).This is our Western mental model for English Pubs.
B.T.W. no tattoos there at the Tilted Kilt either (so I am told). How do they set those standards?
Just google Denver 16th Street Mall and Tilted Kilt for photos for any further explanation.
Collectors Guide, swastika historyLeaving www.cabq.gov
"The swastika was a widely used Native American symbol. It was used by many southwestern tribes, most notably the Navajo. Among different tribes the swastika carried various meanings. To the Hopi it represented the wandering Hopi clans; to the Navajo it represented a whirling log ( tsil no'oli' ), a sacred image representing a legend that was used in healing rituals."
But, I digress.