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Reference: Antiopie
They've relented, have they not?
They have but only slightly. Yesterday's BBC article now says:
Hollister, which is owned by US giant Abercrombie and Fitch, said it had reviewed its policy and staff may now wear a poppy on Remembrance Day itself.
The article then says:

"However, as an American company that has been in existence since 1892, we very much appreciate the sacrifices of both British and American servicemen and women in the World Wars and in military conflicts that continue to this day.

"Our company policy is currently to permit associates to wear a poppy as a token of this appreciation on Remembrance Day.

"In the future, we will revisit, in light of local custom, whether to extend the policy to the days or weeks leading up to Remembrance Day."

But that's not much of a relaxation of their policy.
El Loro
Reference:
What do you think of this? I got dead angry at this today. A&F open a store in our country and then tell staff that they cant wear poppies. I think its outrageous and am so pleased the young girl that they said it to took it to the news! Do you agree or do you think they have a point. I shall refuse to as much as sniff that shop for a while
Don't forget health and safety - what if she accidently tripped over a hanger on the floor whilst wearing one and it stabbed her - health and safety must always come first you know!!
P

There is other poppy-wearing protocol I found interesting. Replacing the pin on a poppy is considered defacing it. A poppy should never be reused; the disposal of it, however, is left up to the individual's discretion. Any poppies found lying on the ground are best placed at the foot of a war monument or local cemetery.

FM

If you want to get the children involved.

Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  • Red tissue paper
  • Floral wire
  • Green floral tape
  1. Cut tissue paper into four 6" squares.

  2. Roll one square of tissue paper around a pencil, making sure it's snug.

  3. Squeeze the top and bottom of the tissue paper together toward the center of the pencil. This forms one petal of the poppy.

  4. Remove the tissue paper "petal" from the pencil and set aside.

  5. Repeat Steps 2 through 4 until all four petals are formed.

  6. Holding the tissue petals at the top of the floral wire, wrap the floral tape around the bottom of the petals, continuing down to the end of the wire stem.

  7. Adjust the petals until you like the way they look, and--voila!--you have a tissue-paper poppy.



Read more: How to Make Tissue Paper Poppies | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_445738...s.html#ixzz14pEc5RjF





 

FM
I guess it comes down to a company's position on its uniform. 


Perhaps the concern is, if one person demands the right to wear a poppy, what right does the company have to refuse others' desire to wear the multitude of ribbons for various causes?  None that I can see.  My feelings towards wearing a yellow or pink ribbon may be stronger than my relation to the poppies for example.  And no less valid?

Then we drift into all the wrist bands for this that and the other.


A company cannot, surely, have officially sanctioned "worthy" causes that they will allow their staff to visibly support whilst rejecting others.


Perhaps that's what they were thinking.
FM
In Flanders' Fields

In Flanders' fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place: and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders' fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe;
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high,
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders' Fields.

John McCrae, 1915

FM

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