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Posted by dorayme on 10/04/06 01:58
In article <UnEUg.18980$E02.7256@newsb.telia.net>,
"Luigi Donatello Asero" <jaggillarfotboll@telia.com> wrote:
> "dorayme" <doraymeRidThis@optusnet.com.au> skrev i meddelandet
> news:doraymeRidThis-BAB6B2.11285804102006@news-vip.optusnet.com.au...
> > In article <hHDUg.18954$E02.7335@newsb.telia.net>,
> > "Luigi Donatello Asero" <jaggillarfotboll@telia.com> wrote:
> >
> > > But I find also a little bit strange that you felt provoked....
> >
> > I don't really feel provoked Luigi... I am more puzzled by the
> > importance that people place on names.
>
> Of course there are circumstances under which a name plays a more important
> role and others under which it plays a less important one.
> Just one example: a man and a woman meet each other and it is love at first
> sight or perhaps they just want to have a one-night stand.
> How important is their name? Very little probably because they have already
> met and liked each other.
Yes, but it could even be off-putting. Imagine being told that
your lover, at a crucial moment, is .... dat da da ... "Adolf
Hitler"!
(says I.... hoping that law about the end of a thread comes into
being at the mention of this name...)
> Now, on the other hand, could you imagine a politician who would candidate
> without saying his/her name?
When I am campaigning for office I don't even mention "dorayme".
It confounds my opponents, they have a hard time running the
lying cheating no good "Bush-style" ads putting me in a false
light. My light is so essentially false that any attempt to
falsify it further serves to do the very opposite. It has been a
very big vote winner for me. I am talking, of course, of a
Martian electorate.
--
dorayme
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