clipped_wings
Established Member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2016
- Posts
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Ok thong wearers. I give up. You win. But can you at least put a pair of socks on then? How Aussie is that?
Ok thong wearers. I give up. You win. But can you at least put a pair of socks on then? How Aussie is that?
It may be more correct in the southern states but I don't know if our little brothers/sisters across the dutch would agree with it being uniquely Aussie. When we were in campervanning in nz for the 2011 rwc, I may have been wearing thongs with socks more than is polite in Australian society. Anyway the main outcome (apart from a a stylish and convenient fashion statement) was that we were continually welcomed by the locals as "one of their own"Ok thong wearers. I give up. You win. But can you at least put a pair of socks on then? How Aussie is that?
Not having a go at you or your post. You raise a number of good points.
But here's the thing with thongs. They are good for the beach. They are good for your backyard and your friends BBQ. That's where it ends.
I can't stand thongs. They don't belong in public. They certainly don't belong in a lounge and they definitely don't belong in an aircraft due to safety issues.
Solid argument backed up by good hard evid... err, personal opinions.
Thankfully it is not just their business.John you are most certainly entitled to an opinion. But it is just that. I have a different one. What other people wear in a social situation is their business.
Ok thong wearers. I give up. You win. But can you at least put a pair of socks on then? How Aussie is that?
Apologies if you don't agree but that's your opinion.
and your opinion is something other????
Don't apologise JohnK. It's not just your opinion. It's societies opinion. Despite the "we want to so we will" set, society does set standards (whether they like it or not) and those standards do directly or indirectly influence peoples judgements. Take a wedding for example. I'm sure some bogans have very proudly tied the knot in thongs (maybe of both variety), but the vast majority do it adorned in socially acceptable (even enviable) attire. I said earlier, it's about respect. At a wedding the stars of the show dress magnificently as a sign of respect for their newly minted partner. The guests dress appropriately (not generally in thongs) as a sign of respect for the bride and groom. On the other end of the scale, how many attend funerals in thongs? That would be shockingly disrespectful to the deceased. School formals see teenagers looking stunning, because they want to. They want to demonstrate that they're prepared to enter society as an equal. The logies last night.......I can't actually recall many thongs gracing the function. Even Grubbidok agreed that it's a given that he'd show his respect to his students by wearing a cap and gown at their graduation. Thongs, boardies and an "cough, Gas or Grass" T-Shirt would likely see him being sacked and lose quite a deal of respect from students and peers alike! There is a time and place for different dress standards and "lounge" style clubs, restaurants and airline facilities are not thong venues and to declare that "we have the right and stuff the rest of you" (what was it recently said.....umm go stick your head were the sun doesn't shine....sheer class) simply disrespects the multitude of others who are expected to just grin and bear it.
Society generally accepts thongs where they belong. Society, for better or worse, judges those who disrespect their fellow travellers by wearing thongs in a formal/semi-formal setting (safety issues aside) like an airline lounge. Whether the thong brigade admits it or not, there's enough evidence on this forum (and others) to show that although there are well dressed slobs, most of those that take that slovenly appearance to the next step and become downright disgusting by placing feet on seats, feet on tray tables, feet on bulkheads, feet on armrests and clean out the rotten skin from between their toes, are wearing thongs.
Even Grubbidok agreed that it's a given that he'd show his respect to his students by wearing a cap and gown at their graduation. Thongs, boardies and an "cough, Gas or Grass" T-Shirt would likely see him being sacked and lose quite a deal of respect from students and peers alike!
No but I did! A lovely hitchhiking lady with a bikie pulled over and that was the text......followed by "nobody rides for free".Heh, even Grubbidok. FWIW I don't own an cough, Grass or Grass shirt, so if you see one in the lounge please don't think it's me!
Not the best analogy. Top hats were and still are, socially acceptable (just not so common anymore). Thongs on the other hand, were acceptable back when humans climbed down out of the trees and lifted their knuckles off the ground, but have never been socially acceptable since real footwear was invented.If AFF existed 50 years ago, we'd be arguing about whether or not people should wear top hats in the carriage waiting room.
Not the best analogy. Top hats were and still are, socially acceptable (just not so common anymore). Thongs on the other hand, were acceptable back when humans climbed down out of the trees and lifted their knuckles off the ground, but have never been socially acceptable since real footwear was invented.
Geez, I hope you don't fall off that high horse, it's a long way down to us knuckle draggers...
Associate yourself with my comment of fact all you like. I've refrained from commenting about much of your posting on the topic .
I tried to present a fair argument for my side without resorting to attacks or sweeping generalisation.
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