Warning: This story will have a lot of quotation marks, because we don't want to be a target of moral policing, thank you very much.

A Bengaluru resident went on a Facebook rant recently after she witnessed a case of "moral-policing" at a movie theatre.

The Facebook user posted a video of a man being "harassed" at Forum Mall Koramangala for wearing a T-shirt that had some "indecent words" printed on it. In case you are wondering, the T-shirt design read, 'Stop Jerking Start F*cking'.

The post says that the man (in the red shirt) was "asked to exit PVR premises, buy a new T-Shirt, change and then enter the theatre."

We should tell you at this point that the objection was not raised by a police officer or a law-maker, but another common mall-goer who had taken a great deal of offense with this "indecent" shirt.

According to a TNM report, this self-attested moralist ordered the T-shirt-wearer to "wear something else and come".

When the "indecent" shirt-wearing man didn't do his bidding, the angry moralist summoned police to access the serious, offensive T-shirt situation.

The police officer then came to the conclusion that the angry moralist was right; a shirt with the words "jerk" and "f*ck" has no place in a public place.

Eventually, the T-shirt-wearer resigned and surrendered to leave the mall premises. But, alas, it wasn't going to be that easy anymore. The police officers took pictures of him in his "indecent" T-shirt for the sake of "evidence".

"That's when me and my friends, along with some other bystanders raised voices and asked what was so wrong about wearing a T-shirt and what law he was flouting by being in a public place in that shirt," a The Quint report quotes the Facebook user.

After this, the Facebook user reached out to Bengaluru Police, who were quick to respond.

Please share complete details to our mail id @ksp.gov.in> - BengaluruCityPolice (@BlrCityPolice) June 2, 2017

Exactly a year ago, a man in Worcester, England, was arrested for wearing a T-shirt in public that "mocked" victims of the 1989 Hillsborough disaster.

Again, in December last year, a T-shirt controversy created much ruckus after a Rosetta mission scientist appeared on TV in a T-shirt painted with semi-naked women.

What do you think about having the right to wear a T-shirt? Should we have it, should it be limited to only quirky but decent language, or should we have the right to wear whatever design T-shirt pleases our hearts?