Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Ban the miniskirt!
The Vatican has launched a crackdown on tourists wearing skimpy clothing.
The tough dress code is applied to people using the Vatican's pharmacy, supermarket and post office.
The Guards drew aside men in shorts and women with uncovered shoulders and short skirts to tell them that they were not dressed properly.
http://www.telegraph....kirts-dress-code.html
Can we all support this ban, and hope that it is extended to visitors to our supermarkets and post offices?
The tough dress code is applied to people using the Vatican's pharmacy, supermarket and post office.
The Guards drew aside men in shorts and women with uncovered shoulders and short skirts to tell them that they were not dressed properly.
http://www.telegraph....kirts-dress-code.html
Can we all support this ban, and hope that it is extended to visitors to our supermarkets and post offices?
Answers
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Gromit
People ignore, flout or do not comply with laws they consider bad, all the time. Which is why we no longer have Community Charge (Poll Tax). Many considered it unfair, so they demonstrated against it, refused to pay it or lobbied their political party to abolish it.
That wasn't arrogant or disrespectful. It is our duty as citizens to guard against bad laws, and do our best to get them revoked.
So any law or tax that you do not like we should do our best to get revoked but people who speak out against the tv licence tax should go to the big house (your words)
People ignore, flout or do not comply with laws they consider bad, all the time. Which is why we no longer have Community Charge (Poll Tax). Many considered it unfair, so they demonstrated against it, refused to pay it or lobbied their political party to abolish it.
That wasn't arrogant or disrespectful. It is our duty as citizens to guard against bad laws, and do our best to get them revoked.
So any law or tax that you do not like we should do our best to get revoked but people who speak out against the tv licence tax should go to the big house (your words)
This is actually nothing new, it's just being enforced in a specific location. A work colleague went to Rome in the 1970s (when we wore mins, the first time round) and was warned off for her skirt being too short. The Vatican being a Holy City, they expect people to show some respect. As ummm says (or nearly did) - "when in Rome...."
I don't understand the connection some people seem to be making between the dress code that's being imposed and the scandal relating to paedophile priests. These are two separate issues. However, that aside, if the authorities implement restrictions in shops around the Vatican, then so be it. If I'm visiting a Catholic church, or a mosque, I comply with the requirement to cover my head, shoulders and legs (and in the case of mosques I remove my shoes too), so in these circumstances people will simply have to conform just as they do in any other place or situation that requires a specific dress code - and if they don't want to do that, then they will just have to stay away. They have a choice.
I'd imagine any MP turning up for parliament so dressed would be turned away
Anybody turning up for a garden party at Buck House certinly would be (even Nick Griffin - especially Nick Griffin).
I don't see why they shouldn't be allowed to impose a dress code - it is not a tourist attraction - it is the headquarters of a huge organisation that permits tourists to visit.
It's not Disneyland
Anybody turning up for a garden party at Buck House certinly would be (even Nick Griffin - especially Nick Griffin).
I don't see why they shouldn't be allowed to impose a dress code - it is not a tourist attraction - it is the headquarters of a huge organisation that permits tourists to visit.
It's not Disneyland
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