[Vision2020] Cake for 3-year-old Hitler Namesake Denied
Donovan Arnold
donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com
Wed Dec 17 20:31:32 PST 2008
Paul,
I would agree with you. Expect in this one case, I think naming your child after a mass genocidial psychopathic holocaust killer is a form of child abuse.
For the store to promote it, would be to participate in the child abuse.
If they asked for a cake with a burning cross, should they make it, or refuse for not holding the beliefs of the KKK? This is the same.
Best Regards,
Donovan
--- On Wed, 12/17/08, Paul Rumelhart <godshatter at yahoo.com> wrote:
> From: Paul Rumelhart <godshatter at yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Cake for 3-year-old Hitler Namesake Denied
> To: "Tom Hansen" <thansen at moscow.com>
> Cc: vision2020 at moscow.com
> Date: Wednesday, December 17, 2008, 1:23 PM
> Myself, I'd figure they simply placed the cake where
> they always do and
> would direct my ire and/or amusement at the asshat that
> ordered the
> cake. I don't like the idea of businesses suddenly
> refusing to do
> business with people because they don't like what
> opinions they hold, or
> that they think they hold.
>
> Paul
>
> Tom Hansen wrote:
> > Well put, Ken.
> >
> > Also . . .
> >
> > I am guessing that the bakery that baked the birthday
> cake (the cake with
> > the swastika) for little Adolf Hitler Campbell did
> not, like most bakeries
> > do, place the cake on display awaiting pickup. If I
> were to stop by the
> > bakery at Rosauers or Wheatberries (like I do almost
> every Saturday
> > morning for my Saturday morning munchies) and saw a
> pastery/cake with a
> > swastika prominently displayed, I would NEVER shop
> there again. But,
> > that's just me utilizing my freedom of choice.
> >
> > Tom Hansen
> > Moscow, Idaho
> >
> >
> >
> >> On Wednesday 17 December 2008 06:28:17 Tom Hansen
> wrote:
> >> <snip>
> >>
> >>> I have absolutely no qualms with parents
> naming their children.
> >>>
> > However,
> >
> >>> they should have some degree of respect for
> thir child's future.
> >>>
> >> They may want to have more respect for their own
> future. The Johnny Cash
> >> song "A Boy Named Sue" comes to mind
> concerning the reaction from the
> >>
> > adult
> >
> >> being given a strongly undesired name as a child.
> >>
> >>
> >>> Can you imagine filling out a job application
> or a school enrollment
> >>> application, where it requests your full name,
> and entering "JoyceLynn
> >>> Aryan Nation Campbell". Just what would
> be the image of the Campbell
> >>> family?
> >>>
> >> For a substantial part of the application
> recipients, ignorant of the
> >>
> > meaning
> >
> >> and import of the name Aryan Nation, the image
> might well be "Oh, well,
> >> that's a little different." Next. Others,
> who know of Aryan Nations,
> >>
> > might
> >
> >> wonder whether this applicant has psychological
> problems with which the
> >> application recipient does not want to become
> involved. Next. It seems
> >>
> > likely
> >
> >> that only the recipient truly willing to go out of
> his or her way to
> >>
> > find out
> >
> >> the true nature of the applicant would proceed
> beyond a cursory
> >>
> > examination.
> >
> >> Fortunately, for all of these children, on their
> eighteenth birthdays
> >>
> > they can
> >
> >> give themselves the present of a new legal name
> via the appropriate
> >>
> > court in
> >
> >> their area of residence. Then they can decide
> whether to disown their
> >> parents, or like the boy named Sue, accept them.
> >>
> >>
> >> Ken
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> > "For a lapse Lutheran born-again Buddhist
> pan-Humanist Universalist
> > Unitarian Wiccan Agnostic like myself there's
> really no reason ever to go
> > to work."
> >
> > - Roy Zimmerman
> >
> >
> > ---------------------------------------------
> > This message was sent by First Step Internet.
> > http://www.fsr.com/
> >
> >
> >
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