EDIT: Huge
faux pas on my part! Sorry folks, I wrote this in response before seeing the second page of posts. I see now that Bob S. covered social contract point and Cathy2 the concept of airline travel. Feel free to skip this post, but I will leave it up.
I don't think I enter into any sort of bargain with the other diners when I go to a restaurant.
You
HAVE entered into a sort of bargain, it is called a
social contract. You may have heard of it, since it has been around since Civilization began.
One could simply read EatChicago, Antonious and MikeG's posts and have plenty of good reasons for a dress code. Though like all wisdom, reason and good reasons, they can't be found by those looking to avoid them.
I agree with MikeG dressing up for a fancy dinner is fun, but what makes it fun is that everyone there is part of the same circus.
Ya'all should watch the movie Crash for a real mind twist on prejudice and correct behavior. Do I discriminate and pre-judge, you bet, probably a couple of hunderd times a day.
Let's face it a dress code is one of the last discriminating, yet politically correct measures of behavior. Not to mention it is strictly quantifiable and objective (no jeans vs. you are required to act respectfully). It is also code words for the atmosphere of the experience. I doubt many folks inquire of the dress code at O'Whathaveyou's near Wriggley, its a given.
I am sure this will continue to change over time, since there is no such thing as the office uniform for men anymore. A side-anecdote, my uncle likes to remind me when he used to travel to Mexico everyone on the plane wore traveling suits. Of course, at that time, he was not jammed into a space the size of a poodle carrier with the seat ahead reclined to the point of smashing his chest.
Can we talk about decorum and personal freedoms on an 4-hour plane trip next
Last edited by
pdaane on December 7th, 2005, 4:25 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Unchain your lunch money!