I got more pushback than I anticipated on one argument in my post about the Ninth Circuit decision about the MAGA-hat-wearing-teacher: the idea that a MAGA hat is not self-evidently outside acceptable public conduct.

I certainly have a reaction to seeing someone in a MAGA hat — I figure they’d probably hate me, and I probably wouldn’t care to hang out with them — and I know some people have stronger reactions. But . . .

…I can’t wrap my head around the concept that openly supporting a former President, who got 75 million votes last time, who is still hugely popular among Republicans, is not only completely acceptable in my social circle or yours, but is completely unacceptable in a way that the law should enforce. It’s just not in the realm of reason. It’s one of the more striking examples I’ve encountered recently of in-a-bubble thinking.
@Popehat well the dude certainly showed why he needed to be at cultural sensitivity training didn't he
@darwinwoodka Does supporting a candidate who got 75 million votes, 47% of voters, mean you require cultural sensitivity training? This is exactly what I’m talking about.
@Popehat I would assume there were other reasons he was there as well. But he insisted on being an asshole about it, too
@darwinwoodka Would a teacher who wore a Biden hat be an asshole? How about an Obama hat?
@Popehat well probably not, but if they were I would hope they wouldn't generate a lawsuit over it claiming the hat was the only reason they were yelled at.
@Popehat I don't care what hat a teacher wears. I care about the example they set. And this guy was an asshole, plain and simple.
@Popehat and the fact he feels he has a RIGHT to be an asshole is why we now have a country where half of us are denied basic rights to our own bodies while two men who treated women like crap are on the SCOTUS.