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Would you send a letter to a soldier using THIS stamp?
US Post Office ^
| 5/17/3
| Varmint Al
Posted on 05/17/2003 8:24:10 AM PDT by Varmint Al
Would you send a letter to a soldier with this stamp?
I found out about this via email and checked the USPS site:
Now the United States Postal Service REMEMBERS and HONORS the EID MUSLIM holiday season with a commemorative first class holiday postage stamp.
REMEMBER the MUSLIM bombing of PanAm Flight 103!
REMEMBER the MUSLIM bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993!
REMEMBER the MUSLIM bombing of the Marine barracks in Lebanon!
REMEMBER the MUSLIM bombing of the military barracks in Saudi Arabia!
REMEMBER the MUSLIM bombing of the American Embassies in Africa!
REMEMBER the MUSLIM bombing of the USS COLE!
REMEMBER the MUSLIM attack on the Twin Towers on 9/11/2001!
REMEMBER all the AMERICAN lives that were lost in those vicious MUSLIM attacks!
REMEMBER to adamantly and vocally BOYCOTT this stamp when purchasing your stamps at the post office. To use this stamp would be a slap in the face to all those AMERICANS who died at the hands of those whom this stamp honors.
I am sure not going to buy any of these stamps!!
Just one more reason email is so popular.
Good Hunting... from Varmint Al
TOPICS: Activism/Chapters
KEYWORDS: muslim; office; post; stamp; usps
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To: Varmint Al
I wouldn't use that stamp, if it was free.
121
posted on
05/17/2003 7:53:35 PM PDT
by
F.J. Mitchell
(If Islam is a religion of peace-Satan is a saint.)
To: TaxRelief
It is quite possible that our own USPS is committing TREASON.
Please don't debase the currency of thought with such as the above.
122
posted on
05/17/2003 8:02:58 PM PDT
by
aruanan
To: kstewskis
"Eid" just means "feast," but when it's by itself, it means "Eid al-Fitr," the feast that ends Ramadan.
Ramadan is a month of fasting that is one of the five Pillars of Islam. So there is a rough parallel to Christian Lent and post-Lenten celebrations, such as Mardi Gras.
Last year Eid was in early December; this year it will come in late November (it is based on the whacky Muslim calendar).
For Eid, people will: gather in humongous groups and pray shortly after sunrise (the EId prayers are a particular liturgy), pay tithes for the poor, put on new clothes, have a big feast and go visiting relatives. In lots of Muslim countries it takes on the appearance and flavour of a block party.
I suppose if we are going to have stamps for Jewish holidays we have to let the Muslims have them too (although we would be singing a different tune, called "convert or die", if the Muslims were in charge).
Can the Aleister Crowley followers be next?
d.o.l.
Criminal Number 18F
To: Salman
"Eid" is not a sect, it is the Arabic word for holiday.
Even funnier. I think they're beautiful stamps. Arabic calligraphy is one of the most beautiful calligraphies of any language. The problem is, on the one hand, total lack of discrimination (liberals) or, on the other, completely absurd distinctions made on the basis of a language. Some very, very old New Testament texts are in Arabic. Do hyper-reactive people imagine in that case that the form is tainting the content? There needs to be a whole lot more thinking and a lot less mindless reacting going on.
124
posted on
05/17/2003 8:12:39 PM PDT
by
aruanan
To: CaptIsaacDavis
Thinking of the Crusades reminds me of the seal of the city of Milan, Italy. It commemorates the Crusades and the Christian triumph. On the left side of the circle is a red Christian cross. On the right side of the circle is a serpent eating a Muslim.
To: Varmint Al
My feelings on this matter are summed up in my current tagline.
I am loathe to be tolerant of the intolerant. Anyone with a lick of sense can appreciate why.
-Jay
126
posted on
05/18/2003 12:55:40 AM PDT
by
Jay D. Dyson
(Islam: We're a religion of peace and we'll kill you to prove it!)
To: contessa machiaveli
like the devout muslim who took it upon himself to murder his superiors in kuwait? Get real Contessa.
Do we condemn all white protestants because of Tim McVeigh or all U.S. Marines because a few become criminals and commit crimes against society.
As conservatives, we owe it to ourselves to start using our brains instead of acting like a bunch of knee-jerk idiots and thereby providing ammo to our rat adversaries.
Frankly, I am damn sick of some of this simple mindedness and, fortunately, so are most conservatives these days.
To: henderson field
Now THAT would be an interesting stamp! In fact, Portugal put out a bunch like that back in the 1960s and 1970s, before the communist coup in '75. I've found some interesting stamps commemorating victories of Western men/countries over Islamic invaders from Spain, Portugal, Greece, Malta, and Croatia, but none from Italy curiously.
To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
(Sorry for the delay responding)
My Dad's father died when he was 14, so he and his (older) brother were the male heads of the family. When his brother was killed, my Dad made the decision for him to be buried there. According to my mother, he felt it would be easier on his mother that way. I don't understand the logic myself. My family is odd :)
My Dad served in the Navy, but doesn't talk about Korea, or WWII for that matter. All he ever said was that the ship he was on (a destroyer) set a speed record crossing the Pacific. My mother, on the other hand, will tell you all sorts of WWII stories (she was in Egypt during the war), and her family is from Alsace-Lorraine.
129
posted on
05/18/2003 4:45:29 PM PDT
by
visualops
(It's the cream of the crap, it's the top of the slime, it's the Democratic Agenda!)
To: Cvengr
has anybody seen Thurgood around and about recently?He's dead, Jim.
130
posted on
05/18/2003 5:07:20 PM PDT
by
HIDEK6
To: Gritty
"Question: Would you send a letter to a soldier using THIS stamp?
Answer: No.
In fact, if the Post Office tried to foist one of these things off on me, I would refuse it. The United States has no business touting Muslim feasts"
I recall similar objections from some christian groups when the United States issued a Chanukah stamp.
Yet the United States regularly touts a Christian holiday with Christmas stamps.
'Tis a puzzlement, to be sure. Either government should be in the religion business, or it shouldn't. (My preference: it shouldn't.)
131
posted on
05/18/2003 5:30:22 PM PDT
by
jde1953
To: muawiyah
So were the leftists the one who designed this one? All the more reason not to buy it!
132
posted on
05/18/2003 8:19:37 PM PDT
by
Salvation
(†With God all things are possible.†)
To: Varmint Al
Those stamps were available at Christmas as one of "your choices" of a "holiday" stamp. I refused them. The woman at the counter said they weren't selling well.
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