What to call this thread?

"When I was in grade school the only kids who went by nicknames in class had those nicknames approved by their parents." S2 #658
When I was in 7th or 8th grade some girls in class were fans of the media-promoted band The Monkees. The girls nicknamed themselves after one of the four members of the band.
Perhaps it matters whether this chosen name was used by classmates, vs faculty. In this case, mostly classmates.

Not sure it matters, but:
a) U.S. vs U.K. - "private school" doesn't mean the same thing.
b) In this case the private school was a Steiner school.


spoke with a very heavy eastern European accent so I'm sure that they'd anglicized their family name when they moved here.
I don't recall having read it, but I gather many a European immigrant to the U.S. entered Ellis Island as Außergewöhnliche, Merkzeichen, or schwerbehindertenausweis,
but crossed the harbor to the mainland as Brown, Jones, or Smith.
A further mystery to me, if so, was it by high-level immigration policy decision, or merely by arbitrary decision of the civil servant behind the counter granting entry?


" your basic man mountain so everyone assumes that he's called Bunny for the same reason that a big guy might be called Tiny." #658
"A boy named Sue"?
I'm not certain of the details, might have been in the Burt Reynolds movie Gator, it might have been the actor Ted Cassidy (played "Lurch" in The Addams Family) but ...
the line I recall, Gator asked the hulking character - why do they call you that ? -
The reply: "Because I tell 'em to." in menacing basso profundo.
 
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"Stop trying to use his name or your religion to validate your hate." Robinson #662
But that is precisely the utility of the divine imprimatur.
"Religion is regarded by the common people as true,
by the wise as false,
and by rulers as useful." sometimes attributed to Seneca the Younger (c.3 BCE - CE 65) *
* I know this quote is commonly attributed to Seneca, but it is mistakenly attributed to him. How do I know this? In Volume 1 of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire",
written by Edward Gibbon, he writes, "“The various modes of worship which prevailed in the Roman world were all considered by the people as equally true; by the philosopher as equally false; and by the magistrate as equally useful.
And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even religious concord." making sense Administrator Rob W. Case
https://makingsense.proboards.com/thread/720/young-boys-search-god
 
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