Japan Video Games Blog

TO THOSE WHO DON'T WANT THEIR WORK PROMOTED

Hey guys and gals! We FIND and PROMOTE people's work, we never take credit for things we haven't written, we just love sharing the things that are interesting, but if you don't want your work or pictures shown, please let me know and I'll take it off, we're not trying to harm any one here or infringe on anyone's copyrights, just late night entertainment for my friends and I after a long days of work.

We're not making money off the site, nor are we publishing anything to other places through feedburner claiming that it's our work, just a hobby of finding cool things around the internet, that's all. Sometimes we copy and paste too quickly and a link giving you credit doesn't appear, if that's the case and you DO want your work promoted, we will add in the backlink, we would love to give credit where credit is due!

Please contact me or drop a comment on any posts you guys don't want up and I'll take it off within 24 hours, thanks!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

HAHA WTF, TALK ABOUT FREEDOM - Venezuelans Upset at Being Restricted to 100 Government-Sanctioned Names - NAM

A new bill introduced last week in Venezuela could limit the names parents choose for their newborns to a list of 100 government-approved names. But the bill has only led Venezuelan commentators and bloggers to call their government bad names. In a Sept. 6 commentary in the Caracas newspaper El Universal, Jorge Sayegh writes the story of Orliuzka, “the very ugly name of a very pretty girl.” Orliuzka gets up everyday at 4:00 a.m. to take a 6:00 a.m. bus into Caracas, where she attends an English class before going to work at 8:30 a.m. If her name were Sandra, he writes, she would still have to make this daily trek because she lives in a Third World capital.

It’s true that some people name their kids horrible names, writes Venezuelan blogger Adriana P. on AOL Latino Sept 3, but “the issue is whether the government has the right to make it law and restrict us to a list.” “This is an arbitrary act,” she writes, “once again disrespecting our freedom at the hands of the dictator. It is truly the height of intervention in the lives of Venezuelan citizens.” “Speaking of extravagant names,” adds blogger Alberto Sept. 4 on AOL Latino, “where does this leave a certain Simón José Antonio de la Santísima Trinidad Bolivar y Palacios (the full name of Latin American independence leader Simón Bolívar), or would it not be considered extravagant since he was able to liberate practically an entire continent?”
Venezuelans Upset at Being Restricted to 100 Government-Sanctioned Names - NAM
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