Your original post that you have since edited:
For Jag. He's having hard time seeing people behave in other ways than a description of a MBTI type. This will make him feel easy. So, let's celebrate the act-like-a-type -day.
Let me give you some advice: Your posts can be seen on i-Spy, before you edit them.
And for the record, I am not a fan of MBTI's 16 boxes.
Your claim about me, is exactly OPPOSITE the truth.
Frankly, I think everyone should take their alleged type out of their profile.
It would force people to relate to each other as human beings, rather than a type.
I don't care what you say about me Santtu, but you better be accurate.
Yeah, there's always the chance that messages will be seen prior to editing. You aren't a fan of 16 boxes, but perhaps some other box system - one that doesn't forgive people acting stressed out or otherwise in an imperfect way, even though they've given their best attempt. In that case, jokes about an ENTJ draw attention to imperfection, which seems a lot like 16-box advocacy on the surface.
I realized the distinction and edited the post accordingly.
So, what kind of influence would you think to make by drawing negative attention to un-type-like behavior?
My message is really more directed to those who actually harass me (and other people) with messages buggering about my type, whether in a positive or negative reinforcement. They give the feeling that a person not acting their type is almost a non-person.
Understand it or not, I've been on the verge of collapse during the past 1 week, having worked too much and having experienced lot of anxiety, headache, dizziness, able to just maintain my panic reaction to minimum so I won't go nuts. I've gotten lot of complaints about my behavior during this time.
I've been irritated by having seen that kind of behavior labeled as anti-ENTJ rather than what it is, making me sneer at unskilled use of this theory.
Edit: of course, I'm unhappy for feeling & acting unbalanced and being noted for it at the moment. But at least, that's not a bad application of type theory.