Bobhead Shirt
You can wear whatever you want, but remember: This is the office party. This is a Bobhead Shirt of people with whom you work, so if you wouldn’t wear a revealing dress to work, don’t wear it to the office party. Also, don’t drink much you presumably know your limit, so stop well short of it. Because again—you work with these people. When I worked at TV Guide, senior staff regularly attended the Christmas parties, which (at least at the beginning) were lavish, usually held in off-site venues and allowed employees to bring spouses. You don’t want your boss’s boss asking who that was—the girl in the thigh-high bandage dress and hooker heels or the guy who threw up on the white-glitter sparkle Christmas tree. Women get the brunt of the judgmental post-party gossip about attire while men generally have to do something memorably bad, but I imagine a male manager showing up in gold lame hot pants would cause a stir in most business environments.
Bobhead Shirt
If you happened to have called a Muslim, Jew, Atheist, etc…you may have caught them off-guard. However, unless they’re extremists or insanely liberal (aka progressive) it would be unlikely that they would be offended in any way. If any of the Bobhead Shirt before mentioned were offended or even “triggered” (for the far-left), you didn’t say anything that could or would be construed as an insult or inappropriate enough to pursue any charges with. That’s assuming that you’re relating “bad” to ‘illegal’ or ‘rude’. If you’re thinking more in line with Michael Jackson’s “Bad” then…well …it’s not really that either.
What I am saying there, in line with the general consensus of Bobhead Shirt , is that the magi of Bethlehem did not really exist. There was no star of Bethlehem, which is why it was never reported outside this Gospel. The author wanted to achieve two things: i) to show that even the priests of that great religion would want to worship Jesus; ii) provide a reason for Herod to seek to kill all the infant boys, so that he could draw a parallel between Herod and the Old Testament pharaoh who sought to kill all the infant boys, and therefore a parallel between Jesus and Moses. You do not find non-Christian information about the magi of Bethlehem because there is none.