You know, this is one of the reasons why I proposed doing a bumper sticker that reads:
I wear a kilt and I vote.
I mean it more as a thought-provoking jest but the point is that even kilties have an agenda. I see a whole lot of "I'm a senior citizen and I vote" bumper stickers in the lot at the grocery store. If the bloody AARP can remind people to think about seniors, what about kilties? (And what about SENIOR kilties, eh?)
I'm just a little tired of seeing those stories about kids being kept out of their proms because they want to go formal kilted...again...what is that all about? What possible harm is there in going to your prom in kilted formalwear?
And being told that you can't show up for work in a kilt when other folks are wearing God knows what else? Inconceivable!
Members of this forum can usually be counted on to at least e-mail the "offending parties"...granted, sometimes a full assault is not the best tactic and sometimes it is better to let the individual deal with a situation on their own...and nasty, insulting e-mails and letters should be right out...that's no constructive benefit to that and we should not lower ourselves to that level.
Knowing our numbers, I doubt that a kilted boycott of anything is going to make a significant impact....okay...maybe on a whisky company...but that's different. Shall we now boycott Jacksonville, Florida until they let that lad wear his kilt to the prom? (I do see that they have a Highland Games coming up...that kid should get some recognition there for standing up for the cause, shouldn't he?) I dinnae think that we're gonna see a Million Kilted Man March anytime soon, either...
But we're not asking for something outrageous here either...I just think that those who have never been kilted might not get the idea of it...still, they should respect our rights here. I'm something like nine or ten generations away from the last of my ancestors who lived in Scotland but they're the branch of my family that gives me inspiration and makes me want to live in a way that would make them proud. I seriously doubt if any of those ancestors even ever wore a kilt but here and now it's a symbol of my connections to them and solidarity with the rest of the Celtic Diaspora.
So you got a point there, my friend...
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AA
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