If you know where I could find how to make one of those, I'd be grateful.Kat Stevens said:paracord poppy, pin backed and bulletproof. Pucker up and plant one, poppy police.
If you know where I could find how to make one of those, I'd be grateful.Kat Stevens said:paracord poppy, pin backed and bulletproof. Pucker up and plant one, poppy police.
Chief Stoker said:The legion loves to send letters to whoever they feel is violating their trademark, even when they don't have a chance of bringing them to court. That means someone selling beaded poppies for a fund raiser or whatever else legion members report to Dominion Command on. In truth they own the trademark to that exact poppy but they interpret that to mean any poppy, including the British legion poppy in Canada.
They claim to be the keepers of the poppy symbol but did you see some of the crap the sell at the legion poppy store.
https://www.poppystore.ca/
Tcm621 said:If you know where I could find how to make one of those, I'd be grateful.
Kat Stevens said:It’s a four bight, three lead turkshead. The centre is the same knot in smaller cord. Flatten them out, glue one on top of the other and stick a back on it.
Pusser said:Now you're just showing off. Most pongoes heads exploded when I just said it was a turk's head...
Blackadder1916 said:And a turkshead is also known as a "woggle knot". Should be familiar to any former Boy Scouts, though you only got to wear it after the Wood Badge.
Thanks to you and PusserKat Stevens said:It’s a four bight, three lead turkshead. The centre is the same knot in smaller cord. Flatten them out, glue one on top of the other and stick a back on it.
DaysGonez0 said:I heard that some stores are banning the practice.
Global News
November 14, 2019
poppies, according to the Royal Canadian Legion, are still popular. The non-profit group that represents Canadian veterans distributes about 20 million poppies across Canada every year and brings in about a dollar each in donations, the organization says.
“The trend is steady,” says Legion spokesperson Nujma Bond.
'Stop trying to be Woke Foods': Staff poppy ban at Whole Foods stirs outcry
TORONTO -- Employees of international supermarket chain Whole Foods have been told not to wear Remembrance Day poppies because they don’t align with the company dress code.
“Whole Foods Market honours the men and women who have and continue to bravely serve their country. We support Remembrance Day in all of our Canadian stores by observing a moment of silence on November 11th and by donating to the Legion's Poppy Campaign. With the exception of those items required by law, our dress code policy prohibits any additions to our standard uniform," the company said in a statement.
Canadian politicians spoke out online against the company policy Friday morning, calling it “shameful and wrong.”
The dress code restriction even spurred Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who called the policy "disgusting and disgraceful," to announce he would seek legislation in the province to ban employers from prohibiting staff from wearing poppies during Remembrance Week.
Canada’s Minister of Veterans Affairs Lawrence MacAulay called the policy "absolutely unacceptable" on CTV News Channel on Friday.
"[Poppies are] to show respect for people who stood in danger for our freedom and democracy around the world. Quite simply it's totally unacceptable and hopefully they can change this quickly," he said.
Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole posted a video message online calling the dress code policy "stupid" in a tweet.
“The poppy is not a cause, it is a sign of respect,” O’Toole said. “The sacrifice of Canadians in the past provides the freedom for a US grocery chain to be stupid today … Let’s tell Whole Foods to stop trying to be Woke Foods.”
The new controversy follows another flashpoint around Whole Food uniforms earlier this year, when U.S. staff filed a federal lawsuit against their employer after they were told they couldn’t wear “Black Lives Matter” face coverings at work.
At the time, store managers also cited the same company dress code language, which forbids symbols and phrases not affiliated with Whole Foods.
“It was wrong when they banned staff expressing support for Black Lives Matter and it’s wrong to ban the Poppy,” wrote NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh on Twitter. “Canadians shouldn’t lose the right to honour the sacrifices of veterans when they go to work.”
Mayors of two of Canada's largest cities responded to the news on Twitter, with Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson calling it "One of the most ridiculous decisions made by a company in recent memory" and Toronto Mayor John Tory urging the company to "rethink its unreasonable ban."
The poppy has long been a symbol of peace used to honour the memory of fallen soldiers from the First and Second World Wars, most often associated with a poem written in 1915 by Canadian physician Lt.-Col. John McCrae.
It’s disgusting and disgraceful that @WholeFoods has banned poppies for their employees. We will always stand with our veterans. Whole Foods should apologize and immediately reverse this decision. Everyone should wear a poppy #lestweforget.
— Doug Ford (@fordnation) November 6, 2020
kratz said:
Haggis said:This law hasn't passed and I don't think it should. It opens the door for all manner of special interest groups to demand that the wearing of their symbol of sacrifice, service or hardship be allowed in the workplace.
Like the Thin Blue Line...
BeyondTheNow said:The issue is the interpretation of the symbol. Yes, the wearing of a poppy can be viewed as support of political issues to some (which isn’t permitted/protected under the Human Rights Codes within a workplace environment in ON), but the majority don’t view it as such.
...Those 'woke" activists see the poppy as representing the glorification of war...
BeyondTheNow said:Yup, queue the white-poppy crap...
BeyondTheNow said:Unless a measured safety risk (think, perhaps, a daycare employee working with babies and toddlers—the pin falls off, a child grabs at it on the clothing, etc or something) I have personally never seen/heard of any company in the customer service industry in this country not allowing their employees to wear poppies.
Haggis said:As I mentioned a few replies ago, the ongoing discussion of the poppy's symbolism is similar to that of the Thin Blue Line,
Critics suggest that the "thin blue line" symbolism represents an "us versus them" mindset that heightens tensions between officers and citizens and negatively influences police-community interactions, by setting police apart from society at large.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_blue_line#Appearances_and_controversy