> is professional in the same way that a suit and tie is professional. It's a uniform to ensure nobody stands out, and the corporation can absorb everybody's personality, like flour incorporated into bread dough. White bread, no seeds.
I take you also strongly believe then that when I waltz up to work in some random hoodie, sweatpants and running shoes, that's actually some bespoke eloquent expression of self, full of meaning?
Reminds me to all those "he/she is wearing this/that kind of glasses/shoes, that means <extremely specific personality trait>" scenes from older movies and shows. Holy hyperbole.
Why would you take it that I "strongly believe" that? I said nothing of the sort, and jumping to that conclusion is a reflection of your own biases, not mine.
> Why would you take it that
Because you believe the quoted part according to your own admission.
> jumping to that conclusion is a reflection of your own biases, not mine.
Could you kindly clarify what that bias is? I'm too biased to see it apparently, so I'll not know until you put it into words.