Sunday, February 24, 2013




VA: DMV says war vet’s vanity plate encourages violence

Must not be the slightest hint of mocking Muslims

A legal battle between the state and an Iraq war veteran over his personalized license plate is not over.

Sean Bujno's plate reads: "ICUHAJI," which can be read to state: "I See You, Haji." Some Arab-Americans object to that phrase.

The DMV revoked the license plate in 2011, saying it could be interpreted as socially, racially or ethically offensive or disparaging.

Chesapeake Circuit Court Judge John W. Brown ruled last November that the DMV couldn't deny the Chesapeake man's license plate on the basis that it denigrated individuals of a particular nationality. The judge ordered the DMV to either return the license plate to Bujno or find a permissible reason to keep it from him.

In a recent letter sent to Bujno, the DMV now says the license plate encourages violence and is vulgar.

Meyer said the use of the word "Haji" is not intended as a slur. He said it simply refers to someone who has made a pilgrimage to Mecca, or the hajj.

The plate was displayed on Bujno's car for more than four years before the DMV revoked it. Bujno was honorably discharged from the Army in 2009.

Source


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"Political correctness is a far greater threat to our freedom and liberty than is terrorism..."