In today’s jewed Europe, selling un-peecee t-shirts can get you a prison sentence

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Paris shopkeeper remanded in custody for anti-Semitic shirts.

Wed Aug 13, 11:28 AM

WINNIPEG (CBC) - French authorities have opened a preliminary inquiry into the sale of T-shirts bearing anti-Semitic slogans in Paris, according to media reports.

Police opened the probe following a complaint filed by France’s National Bureau of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism [Orwellian enough for your?] , according to the French daily newspaper Le Monde.

The grey shirts were printed with German and Polish text that read “Jews forbidden from entering the park,” reproducing Nazi-era signs posted in 1940. The shirts were sold in Paris’s northern 19th arrondissement for 18 euros or about $28 Cdn.

The owner of the shop and a saleswoman were taken into custody Tuesday evening, according to Le Monde.

The BBC reported that when asked about the shirts, a sales clerk at the store said she didn’t understand what the T-shirt texts said

Source.

3 Responses to “In today’s jewed Europe, selling un-peecee t-shirts can get you a prison sentence”


  1. 1 Debby Taylor

    The Holocaust is a lie.

  2. 2 Fred Scrooby

    Debby Taylor is correct.

  3. 3 Friedrich Braun

    Where are you in that translation, Fred?

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