Holland Township family angry that supermarket won't personalize cake for their son

sablescort

New Member
Joined
May 1, 2003
Messages
3,504
Reaction score
0
Feel sorry for these kids having to live with their names.

Holland Township family angry that supermarket won't personalize cake for their son - The Express-Times | Lehigh Valley PA Newspaper - lehighvalleylive.com


JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell, Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell and Adolf Hitler Campbell.

Good names for a trio of toddlers? Heath and Deborah Campbell think so. The Holland Township couple has picked those names and the oldest child, Adolf Hitler Campbell, turns 3 today.

This has given rise to a problem, because the ShopRite supermarket in Greenwich Township has refused to make a cake for young Adolf's birthday.

"We believe the request ... to inscribe a birthday wish to Adolf Hitler is inappropriate," said Karen Meleta, a ShopRite spokeswoman.
The Campbells turned down the market's offer to make a cake with enough room for them to write their own inscription and can't understand what all of the fuss is about.
 
*smh* How could someone do that to their child?? :ugh: That Hitler kid has some serious butt kickings coming to him when he gets older.
 
who would name their child with that kind of name.....
 
:eek: How could a parent named a child such a horrific name. I feel bad for the kid.
 
The parents were seriously lacking in common sense when they named their children.
 
poor kid. what made the parents gave their kids name that is something so special to them???
 
Adolf Hilter did not bear any children, but his brother did. They are both in their 40's-50's and live on the south shore of Long Island, NY. They made a pact NOT to have children so the family name would not go on. This family of Adolf Hilter dies out with these two.
 
Please, don't let it happen to WWIII, lead by evil woman. That's so embarrass.
 
I suppose we are all fortunate that Hitler wasn't Smith. :roll:
 
Gee - All of these names, The parents had to pick out the ones that are seriously disturbing for their children. Yeah, They could have came up with better names than the ones that they gave for their children. I feel sorry for these children who bears those names.

Anyway, As for the store that refused to make the personalized cake for the Campbell family; The store did take a proper step by offering to write their own inscriptions which was fair enough and yet, The parents refused and shot down the offer. Now, The store was willing to barter a deal with the parents and the parents got angry at the store just because they were not satisfied with the negotiated deal.

I'm going to play as an devil's advocate here for a minute - I don't think the children should be punished for this just because of the given names that the Parents got for them. It is not the children's fault for having these names.

Also, Rarely, I'd see a cake with a full name on it. Usually it'd be like "Happy Birthday, (First Name)". If the parents had comply with the deal, the problem would have been solved by having the cake saying "Happy Birthday, Adolf".
 
:eek:

Shame on the parents! Poor kid! They're some sick reason why they name their child that.
 
I think that is disturbing and very sad to think how they will raise the children to follow those Neo Nazi views.
 
Time to adopt the Swedish baby name law in the USA...

Forbidden names: identity and the law - The Local

Swedish law also has plenty to say about first names. The tax authority can veto parents' choice of name for a new-born baby if officials decide the name could "cause trouble" for the child later in life.

They can also ban names if they 'have the character of a surname' - even though using surnames as given names is a common practice outside the Nordic region. While Wallenberg or Reinfeldt might jar as first names, many people elsewhere have taken to the practice. What, for instance, would the Swedish authorities have made of Jude Law's sons Rafferty and Finlay? Or Macaulay Culkin, Lennox Lewis, Mackenzie Crook and Fletcher Christian, for that matter?

Despite the questions over this part of the name law it is the mellannamn law that raises most objections.

People have complained that the law is applied unevenly, with rulings depending largely on the preferences of individual bureaucrats. For instance, a couple was initially banned from calling their daughter Metallica (a decision later overturned), authorities in another part of Sweden allowed a baby boy to be called Google. The law also brings problems for transgender people, as the rules make it hard to change the gender of forenames.

The problems with the law governing mellannamn were highlighted recently when a couple from southern Sweden said they would divorce if that's what it took to allow their son to bear both their surnames. Lars Jensen and Lina Wernström Jensen described the authorities' ruling that their son Aksel could not be named Aksel Wernström Jensen as long as they were married as "absolutely absurd".

Just make it pretty simple no kids will ever be named after those Third Reich assholes if we adopt a modified version of this law that only concerns after infamous names. That should spare these kids the embarrassment and baggage these names carry.

and oh btw I found out the origin of Honszlynn Hinler's name. It was pretty a veiled reference to Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler (Google him up I aint giving out link for this one...)
 
Well from what I know of Sweden (we had a Swedish foreign exchange student live with us for a year in 1997) the courts dont automatically shoot down a name selection unless it is absurd such as Metallica, Google, or in this case Adolf Hitler.

Surprisingly most people have very Anglo names. The student that lived with us is named Erik Vikstrom. (If you've ever heard of Westlings, his father owns that company that makes the saw blades. They do make some home products but it is mostly industrial blades. His long-time girlfriend's name is Sandra. Of course he is of a younger generation, his grandfather's name is Boris I believe.
 
3-year-old Hitler can't get name on cake

3-year-old Hitler can't get name on cake

Family upset at store for denying request, and angry Internet postings

updated 1:16 a.m. ET Dec. 17, 2008



EASTON, Pa. - The father of 3-year-old Adolf Hitler Campbell, denied a birthday cake with the child's full name on it by one New Jersey supermarket, is asking for a little tolerance. Heath Campbell and his wife, Deborah, are upset not only with the decision made by the Greenwich ShopRite, but with an outpouring of angry Internet postings in response to a local newspaper article over the weekend on their flare-up over frosting.

"I think people need to take their heads out of the cloud they've been in and start focusing on the future and not on the past," Heath Campbell said Tuesday in an interview conducted in Easton, on the other side of the Delaware River from where the family lives in Hunterdon County, N.J.

"There's a new president and he says it's time for a change; well, then it's time for a change," the 35-year-old continued. "They need to accept a name. A name's a name. The kid isn't going to grow up and do what (Hitler) did."

Deborah Campbell, 25, said she phoned in her order last week to the ShopRite. When she told the bakery department she wanted her son's name spelled out, she was told to talk to a supervisor, who denied the request.

Karen Meleta, a spokeswoman for ShopRite, said the Campbells had similar requests denied at the same store the last two years and said Heath Campbell previously had asked for a swastika to be included in the decoration.

"We reserve the right not to print anything on the cake that we deem to be inappropriate," Meleta said. "We considered this inappropriate."

The Campbells ultimately got their cake decorated at a Wal-Mart in Pennsylvania, Deborah Campbell said. About 12 people attended the birthday party on Sunday, including several children who were of mixed race, according to Heath Campbell.

"If we're so racist, then why would I have them come into my home?" he asked.

The Campbells' other two children also have unusual names: JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell turns 2 in a few months and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell will be 1 in April.

Heath Campbell said he named his son after Adolf Hitler because he liked the name and because "no one else in the world would have that name." He sounded surprised by all the controversy the dispute had generated.

Campbell said his ancestors are German and that he has lived his entire life in Hunterdon County. On Tuesday he wore a pair of black boots he said were worn by a German soldier during World War II.

He said he was raised not to avoid people of other races but not to mix with them socially or romantically. But he said he would try to raise his children differently.

"Say he grows up and hangs out with black people. That's fine, I don't really care," he said. "That's his choice."

3-year-old Hitler can't get name on cake - Weird news- msnbc.com



:jaw: *speechless*


Come and discuss what you think of this?









 
I can't understand why the parents pick monster's name up for their child?

I fail to understand why the law allows the parents to pick the horrible names like that? Don't the law have child protection? Here in Germany, pick those name like that is not acceptance. They ban weird/monster names to protect childen's welfare.

Well, ShopRite can say no if they feel it's inappropriate to decorate "Adolf Hitler". I guess it would be different if the parents agrees with ShopRite's offer to decorate something differently than just "Adolf Hitler"... like "Happy Birthday, Adolf"...

It look like that the parents want to publicize this to make people feel sorry for them? I feel sorry for their child, not their parents.

I fail to understand why the parents went to the same shop, they did at 2 years ago to ask for swastika? If the parents don't agree with ShopRite's proper offer then go to another baker, why can't they then?...
 
Back
Top