Seca Girl wrote:They're not H-D products, don't use H-D parts, but are the ultimate evolution of H-D products.
I'm no Harley loyalist, though I do like their bikes, but to say a chopper is the ultimate evolution of the classic cruiser is.... well, let's say it's an interesting statement. Well, let's say it's wrong... let's say it's dumb too.
As for the conversation at hand, I think getting a corporation's brand tattooed on your body is questionable at best. I can understand the whole Harley thing.. my girlfriend's parents are big H-D people (yes, they're bikers) and I can certainly see where they're coming from. I'll probably own a Harley, but I cannot forsee myself ever being so loyal to a *corporation* as to get their logo permanently embedded into my skin.
I also have to say that it's childish to take the attitude that "corporate logo tattoos are dumb" and then attack the person who claimed this by equating that statement to "all logo tattoos are dumb." If someone was in the USMC and get a Marines tattoo of some sort.. more power to you. That's pretty cool if you ask me. In any case it's a completely different thing to get an American flag tattoo vs a Nike swoosh tattoo. There's no possible way to deny that.
Furthermore, Seca Girl's "Brand Canada" analogy is without any merit or relevance whatsoever. It's pure folly to imply that all a "Harley loyalist" knows about H-D is through advertising or marketing. Often, the motor company itself isn't even the direct target of their loyalty. In the H-D world, it really kinda does represent a lifestyle to many people. It's a position - political and social all at the same time. It represents something... something that isn't just a motor company. And a damn lot of them know way more about the motor company than anything they've learned through marketing.