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Europe
Birthday party snub sparks human rights complaint to Swedish parliament
2008-06-30
An eight-year-old boy has sparked an unlikely outcry in Sweden after failing to invite two of his classmates to his birthday party. The boy's school says he has violated the children's rights and has complained to the Swedish Parliament. The school, in Lund, southern Sweden, argues that if invitations are handed out on school premises then it must ensure there is no discrimination.

The boy's father has lodged a complaint with the parliamentary ombudsman. He says the two children were left out because one did not invite his son to his own party and he had fallen out with the other one.

The boy handed out his birthday invitations during class-time and when the teacher spotted that two children had not received one the invitations were confiscated.

'My son has taken it pretty hard,' the boy's father told the newspaper Sydsvenskan. 'No one has the right to confiscate someone's property in this way, it's like taking someone's post,' he added.
This is Sweden, pal ...
A verdict on the matter is likely to be reached in September, in time for the next school year.
Posted by:john frum

#11  People get the government they deserve.

- Thomas Jefferson


Posted by: DoDo   2008-06-30 20:01  

#10  Going back to childhood - eons ago - I remember the birthday list being a very selective thing to create just the right sort of day. Other kids did the same thing..

I even remember inviting one girl among all the boys to my first grade b-party and how happy I was when she made it. Also, how a bunch of other cuties got friendly after they heard she went...
If everybody came it wouldn't have been special and I wouldn't remember it.

Kids did similar things but the wife modified their lists a bit too much....

Still - a b-day party with your whole class is not a b-day party it is a class party you subsidize.

Perfect communism... What's yours is mine, What's mine is mine.

Posted by: 3dc   2008-06-30 12:45  

#9  Big Jim's a troll for that? I'm having a hard time seeing sinktrapping, let alone trolldom. What standard did he violate?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-06-30 12:09  

#8  Well, bigjim, that might not have been a well mannered thing for you to say but I must admit I was wondering the same thing myself. It'd be just like 'em to push this kind of issue. And then, just think if they had been invited, the kind of wet blankets they would have been.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2008-06-30 12:02  

#7  I'm gonna take a wild frickin guess here and say that uninvited kids were mooks.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-06-30 09:53  

#6  It was Friday. It was cold in Lund. We were working the day watch out of Childrens Birthday Party Human Rights Violations Division...
Posted by: tu3031   2008-06-30 09:01  

#5  I say it's our fault. Because we don't beat or kill liberals for their stupid beliefs, we have allowed this illogical thinking pattern to take root. We should have beat them senseless a long time ago.
Posted by: wxjames   2008-06-30 07:56  

#4  Drink alert, Angie!
Posted by: lotp   2008-06-30 07:14  

#3  You gotta fight for your right to party!

(Someone was going to say it eventually.)
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2008-06-30 05:15  

#2  Coming soon to the U.S. -- under President Obama......
Posted by: CrazyFool   2008-06-30 00:54  

#1  Gawd... You have to invite a bully and your enemy to a birthday party?
I don't get it.
I really really don't.
Posted by: 3dc   2008-06-30 00:37  

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