Woman faces fines for peace sign

Posted on Monday 27 November 2006

A homeowners association in southwestern Colorado has threatened to fine a resident $25 a day until she removes a Christmas wreath with a peace sign that some say is an anti-Iraq war protest or a symbol of Satan.


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3 Comments for 'Woman faces fines for peace sign'

  1.  
    mm
    November 28, 2006 | 6:29 pm
     

    How can a homeowner’s association president fire committee members?

  2.  
    November 28, 2006 | 9:19 pm
     

    If the homeowner’s association president was involved in the drafting of the housing committee’s bylaws, he can give himself whatever power he wants I guess. Sounds like the president is the one that needs to get fired.

  3.  
    November 28, 2006 | 11:28 pm
     

    The NY Times has an update:

    Last week, a couple were threatened with fines of $25 a day by their homeowners’ association unless they removed a four-foot wreath shaped like a peace symbol from the front of their house.

    The fines have been dropped, and the three-member board of the association has resigned, according to an e-mail message sent to residents on Monday.

    Two board members have disconnected their telephones, apparently to escape the waves of callers asking what the board could have been thinking, residents said. The third board member, with a working phone, did not return a call for comment.

    In its original letter to the couple, Lisa Jensen and Bill Trimarco, the association said some neighbors had found the peace symbol politically “divisive.”

    A board member later told a newspaper that he thought the familiar circle with angled lines was also, perhaps, a sign of the devil.

    The peace symbol came to prominence in the late 1950s as the logo for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, a British antiwar group, according to the group’s Web site. It incorporates the semaphore flag images for the letters in the group’s name, a “D” atop an “N.”

    Other people have said the upright line with arms angled down, commonplace in the United States in the Vietnam War, especially, has roots in the early Christian era, representing a twisted or broken cross.

    Mr. Trimarco said he put up the wreath as a general symbol of peace on earth, not as a commentary on the Iraq war or another political statement.

    In any case, there are now more peace symbols in Pagosa Springs, a town of 1,700 people 200 miles southwest of Denver, than probably ever in its history.

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