I missed the part where Americans acknowledged the inalienable right to feel comfortable all the time in any situation. Cops, firefighters, cancer patients, whistle blowers, Republican professors.... There are countless brave people in this country, but for the most part our citizens need to grow a pair. We are slipping away from greatness for a lot of reasons, but the need to be mollycoddled at every turn certainly doesn't help. No, we don't need everyone to be John Wayne, but I mean really. If I own a cafe and you're uncomfortable eating there because a cop comes in you can get your milk toast somewhere else. Don't let the door hit ya where the good lord split ya.
And then there's the difference between hard and stressful. Building cinder block walls is hard. Being an air traffic controller is stressful. Relatively speaking, most service jobs are neither. We owned a small restaurant years ago and did every job there, all day, every day. Getting busy during rush hour and dealing with the occasional jerk was about as bad as it got. The only source of real anxiety was when it came time to pay bills and meet payroll! Anyway, nothing there compared to the possibility of facing a life threatening situation even once, let alone daily. In the end everyone deserves respect as a human being and every job should afford the opportunity to carry it out with dignity. No one should argue that, but the volume of the whining in this country is deafening. Maybe instead of waiting in vein for a savior to rise from the streets (can't beat paraphrasing The Boss) its time for those of us that don't have infinite resources to start doing things a little differently.