A company that builds a super center on ancient burial grounds, as they say in my neck of woods, “ain’t too smart”.
Of course, they love Wal-Mart in my neck of the woods. I am personally frightened by it and forbidden to shop there (by my brother who is in the grocery business).
I love the jackass in Arizona’s comment about the project.
From the Washington Post:
“We wanted people to think about the freedoms we enjoy in America. The intent was wholly honorable and good,” said Chuck Coughlin, president of Highground Inc., a Phoenix consulting company that created the advertisement. “We will not back away from substance of the ads . . . We will apologize for the use of imagery.”
“People make mistakes. They move on,” he said.
Sounds like a typical the-Jews-need-to-get-over-it mentality, which is great since anti-Semitism has totally disappeared in the world. If you don’t count Europe, Middle East and North and South America as the world.
Not a smart move? You’ll really got the hang of this British understatement thing.
A company that builds a super center on ancient burial grounds, as they say in my neck of woods, “ain’t too smart”.
Of course, they love Wal-Mart in my neck of the woods. I am personally frightened by it and forbidden to shop there (by my brother who is in the grocery business).
I love the jackass in Arizona’s comment about the project.
From the Washington Post:
“We wanted people to think about the freedoms we enjoy in America. The intent was wholly honorable and good,” said Chuck Coughlin, president of Highground Inc., a Phoenix consulting company that created the advertisement. “We will not back away from substance of the ads . . . We will apologize for the use of imagery.”
“People make mistakes. They move on,” he said.
Sounds like a typical the-Jews-need-to-get-over-it mentality, which is great since anti-Semitism has totally disappeared in the world. If you don’t count Europe, Middle East and North and South America as the world.