You seemed in the post that I replied to being taken issue with Anchorman's community actions, and suggesting that it was your business what they did as part of their temembrance service - was that not your intention?
Actually I was trying to understand why commemoration of miners whose deaths wasn't linked to war was happening on this day. AM explained this to me.
But if I strongly disapproved, so what. That would be my opinion and I'd be perfectly entitled to in. And in most cases the community in question would also be entitled to say - 'sod you, none of your business, we are doing it anyway'.
But the use of remembrance symbols such as the poppy isn't like that - see below.
The use of a trademarked symbol is an irrelevant strawman to this.
It isn't a straw man at all. The fact that the poppy is trademarked means that it isn't the case that a community can just decide to use the symbol for whatever purpose they choose and 'it is no-one else's business'. If the poppy is being used for purposes that contravene trade mark it is someone else's business - the holder of the trademark. And the Royal British Legion has taken action against people and organisations whose use of the poppy they felt was not appropriate, and actually that has actually included remembrance events. I suspect if the RBL thought the poppy was being used outside the context of remembrance of people who had died in war they would take a view and potentially take action.
So here is a hypothetical example - imagine a group of anti abortion campaigners decided to run a campaign during the remembrance period that highlighted the numbers of abortions and compared it to the numbers of people killed in war and used the poppy as a symbol in remembrance of all those 'dead babies'. Would this be OK, would this be 'none of our business' and the 'our' includes the holders of the trademark for use of the poppy.
In that example my opinion would be that the use of the poppy would be deeply inappropriate and I'd consider it my business to bring it to the attention of the RBL and their business to prevent further use of the poppy in that context.
AM's example, by the way, is very different to this as it would appear they are holding two separate events, which are on the same day for completely legitimate reasons. And as AM points out there is a legitimate remembrance for miners whose deaths were due to the war effort.