Aussie jew demands state pay because signmaker unaware of jewish "sensitivities"

Started by yankeedoodle, July 09, 2023, 02:48:45 PM

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yankeedoodle

If you're in the city, and you want a taxi, what do you do?  You hail it, of course.  https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hail%20a%20taxi

And, how do you hail a taxi?  You raise your arm to get the taxi driver's attention, of course.

So, in South Australia - which is a state in Australia - they have a public bus system, and, apparently, if you are at a bus stop, and you want a particular bus to stop and pick you up, you hail the bus by holding up your arm.

The good people of South Australia have done their citizens a favor, and put up signs showing people how to hail a bus.

And, of course, some deranged jew thinks "Hail bus" means "Heil Hitler," and, is demanding that the state tear down these signs - produced by either 1) a neo-Nazi or 2) an Aussie who wasn't sufficiently aware of jewish sensitivities - and replace them by signs that the jews will accept, and you can bet that the jews know a signmaker - a jewish signmaker - who can be given the contract.   <:^0




Australian state to review 'Seig Heil' bus sign after complaints from Jewish leader   
Norman Shueler said 'any revival or glorification of Nazism is repulsive'
https://www.thejc.com/news/world/australian-state-to-review-seig-heil-bus-sign-after-complaints-from-jewish-leader-DGRrDLHMRgxeaxNLeWdBR

An Australian state is considering replacing their bus stop signs because they resemble a Nazi salute following a complaint from a local Jewish leader.

Adelaide businessman Norman Shueler claims a stylised depiction of a man hailing a bus looks a little too similar to a Hitler supporter performing a Seig Heil salute.

The yellow signs, which adorn bus stops around South Australia, show a black-and-white image of a would-be passenger raising his arm.

"Any revival or glorification of Nazism is repulsive and tasteless, to say the least," Shueler told The Advertiser.

"We have some survivors in Adelaide, and if they saw these reincarnations, I can imagine what they might think."

South Australia's Transport Minister Tom Koutsantonis said the signs had been in use for three years, and until now had generated no complaints.

But, he added, he would ensure the matter was looked into nonetheless.

Koutsantonis said: "Mr Schueler is a distinguished member of South Australia's Jewish community and I am naturally concerned by the suggestion he has raised, and I will ask my department to review it."

The Seig Heil was used as a greeting gesture and sign of allegiance to Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany.

Officially adopted by the party in 1926, it was reportedly based on a Roman tradition - though no artwork from that era appears to depict it.

The gesture is now illegal to perform in Germany.