The days of “yes sir/thank you ma’am” are gone, for me.
Not for me, I don't use sir or ma'am often. However, sometimes it just comes out. Wouldn't if I thought it was insulting, but I doubt it often is...
My family moved from Florida to Utah when I was in high school, my first time here, I had always called all my teachers sir or ma'am. However when I started doing it in Utah the English teacher called me aside. He said when he first heard me he thought I was making fun of him, but then with my accent he realized I wasn't. He suggested I stop, and I did, for the most part. Not a tradition here, but a very different reason from yours. Note, back in then much of Florida was culturally southern, not so much today.
We also used to refer to adults by Ms or Mr first name. Mostly just friends of the family, a term of respect. In north Florida some people still called me Mr Rob, always liked it.
I refuse to cater to the demands of those
with deviant, ignorant, repulsive behavior.
It's my choice not to interact with them.
A reasonable policy, I think. Who are you talking about?
I call everybody "dear" like Tallulah Bankhead called everyone "darling."
I grew with frequent drives from Florida to Louisiana through Mobile. The
Bankhead Tunnel was one of the high points. My mother always told me it was named for Tullulah Bankhead, greatly disappointed to find it was actually named for some uninteresting former Alabama governor or something... Named a pet turtle Tullulah for her, had trouble spelling it though.
Y'all can call me most anything, I'm hard to insult.