On Monday 04 June 2007 10:38:45 Miriam Ruiz wrote: > 2007/6/4, Alexander Reelsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > Hi > > > > > On Sun, 2007-06-03 at 12:49 +0200, Andreas Tille wrote: > > >> I'm not really picky about names and would be quite relaxed if the > > >> official > > >> homepage http://www.sturmbahnfahrer.com/ would not support the > > > > suspicion > > > > >> by using a font that at least supports the ill feeling. So even if I > > >> don't > > >> want to spekulate about lawyers opinions - it seems to show at least > > > > bad > > > > >> taste of the authors. > > > > > > Isn't this just a standard blackletter font? > > > > Apart from that gothic fonts were forbidden by law in 1941 and replaced > > by latin type of lettering. So the feeling is really nothing more than a > > feeling in this case. > > I can't believe that... gothic fonts are forbidden in Germany by law!!!???
Haha, certainly not in 1941 :/ Geez. This must be referring to some non-German juristiction. In Germany, the § 86 of the German Strafgesetzbuch, titled "Verbreiten von Propagandamitteln verfassungswidriger Organisationen", is forbidding symbols of organisations that are non-constitutional http://dejure.org/gesetze/StGB/86.html. Here an overview about forbidden symbols: http://www.turnitdown.de/ns-symbole.html http://www.hagalil.com/deutschland/rechts/erkennungszeichen/rechtsextremismus.htm What people are doing is to use kind of similar symbols to circumvent trouble. There are edit distances in the writing, birth dates, positions of letters in the alphabeth, ... did you know that the London shirt company Lonsdale has the letter NSDA in their name? They are selling a real lot for that reason. Package whatever you want. But value your time. And value your intellect. Steffen