frankie_the_yankee wrote:I think it's interesting. Banks are public accommodations, but as far as I'm concerned if they want to have a "hats off" policy or some such, it's OK by me. Anybody who doesn't like it can go do their banking somewhere else.
I would be one of those people going somewhere else. Businesses that want my money do not get to tell me how to dress when I'm buying whatever product or service they're trying to sell me, if I have a choice.
frankie_the_yankee wrote:I can see where some types of religious attire could be problematic. If I were running things I would probably say, "Too bad. Establish your own bank if you don't like it." But our courts might not be so "enlightened".
Enlightened? How 'bout if you're running things you also ban black people, since according to the FBI statistics they comprised the majority (just over 50%, in 2006) of all bank robbers? You can "enlighten" your banking system right back into the nineteenth century, when, guess what....They still had bank robberies.
Perhaps we would be better off if the geniuses over at the Florida Bankers Association recognized the *real* problem, which is that banks are very soft targets. It's common knowledge that you can walk into a bank, hand the teller a note, and walk out with money that didn't belong to you two minutes ago. For cryin' out loud...When a couple of giggling teenage girls on cell phones can hold up a bank, you know that banks have lowered the bar to the point that the actual act of robbing a bank is nearly a risk-free proposition. If they quit handing out money to everybody with a note, and start, say, hitting audible alarms instead of silent ones, they'll eliminate 90% percent of bank robberies which are perpetrated by casual bungling opportunists who know that it's easier money than panhandling.