The Starmaker wrote:
> On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 10:17:07 -0500, "Alric Knebel" <alric@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> wrote:
>
>> "The Starmaker" <starmaker@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>> news:1dnq64prqahnc44q4jocl4oijsoqgk5es3@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> On Thu, 03 Jul 2008 18:17:18 -0400, FDR <fdr@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>
>>>> The Starmaker wrote:
>>>>> On Thu, 03 Jul 2008 17:29:41 -0400, FDR <fdr@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> The Starmaker wrote:
>>>>>>> Did you know that Shrek is Jewish?
>>>>>> And you would care cause you have some hard on for Jews.
>>>>> Jewish girls you mean, not Jewish guys, I'm not gay.
>>>>>
>>>>> But why is it whenever I mentioned Jewish people it seems to
>>>>> rub people the wrong way. It brings out their worse...I haven't
>>>>> figured it out
>>>>> entirely yet..Somehow they get distracted. I don't know any other
word
>>>>> to put
>>>>> in place of Jewish, but it seems that word, or any word related to
>>>>> Jewish people makes people nauseous.
>>>>>
>>>>> When all I'm talking about is a cartoon named Shrek.
>>>>>
>>>>> Did you know Shrek is Jewish?
>>>> Shrek is an ogre, ya doof.
>>> Shrek is Jewish. Shrek is a Jewish word. It means "monster". It's a
>>> Yiddish word... "Shrek" means monster.
>>>
>>> Don't throw away your DVDs now...it's just a word.
>> You seem to be the only person who cares, you queef. It's not even
exactly
>> a Jewish word. Here:
>>
>> "Shrek! is a picture book written and illustrated by William Steig,
written
>> in 1990, about a young ogre who finds the ogre of his dreams when he
leaves
>> home to see the world. The name "Shrek" is taken from the German and
>> Yiddish word "Schreck"/"Shreck", meaning "fear, terror". The Academy
>> Award-winning film Shrek is loosely based on the book, with the
characters
>> of Shrek and Princess Fiona "evolving" from the book's characters.
However,
>> other completely new aspects were added to the film, most notably
characters
>>from other fairy tales, such as Snow White and The Gingerbread Man. The
>> film was very popular and has spawned two sequels as of June 2007,
Shrek 2
>> and Shrek the Third."
>>
>> So, really, it's a made-up word.
>>
>> You monkey.
>
> Knebel, don't come here with ****in lies. The spelling is "Shrek".
> Not, Schreck, Not Shreck, but Shrek. It is the way it is spelled in
> the movie and the book. It is a Jewish word spelled by Jewish people
> "Shrek". It is spelled Shrek in this Yiddish glossary
> http://www.bubbygram.com/yiddishglossary.htm
>
> If she spelled it wrong, tell the *****, don't tell me.
Oh you're such a catch. Not only anti-semetic but has hatred for women.
Who's next?
>
> It is a Jewish word. It is spelled Shrek in the language of Yiddish.
> The language Jewish people speak. It has 5 letters, not 6, not 7
> letters, but 5 letters. SHREK spells Shrek! Don't bring the Germans
> into this because you people always do that.
>
>
> "loosely based on the book"? you mean STOLEN.
>
> I didn't know they stole it...but hell, they steal everything don't
> they?
>
> If it has Spielberg name on it or any berg, it's stolen.
>
> That's a fact, jack.
>
>
> The Starmaker
>
>
>
>


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