SHOULD INDIVIDUALS BE ALLOWED TO COLLECT NAZI ARTIFACTS?
kevin6ca.substack.com
They say that a man’s home is his castle but it would probably be more accurate to say that a man’s (or a woman’s) home is his museum. Most of us tend to accumulate artifacts related to the subjects that interest us. Movie fans often fill their walls with movie posters. Or perhaps they have an album filled with the autographed photos of famous actors, or a shelf full of books about the cinema. The musicians I know tend to fill their houses with guitars, keyboards, vinyl record albums, concert posters, and other such stuff. The home of one of my neighbors is a veritable shrine to the works of artist and author Edward Gorey. My wife and I once knew a man who was passionate about two high-quality brands: Rolls Royce and National Geographic. The large living room of his Silicon Valley home was a monument to both brands. When you entered his front door you saw that the left side of room was completely dedicated to National Geographic memorabilia. The right side was completely dedicated to Rolls Royce memorabilia. An invisible line seemed to run down the middle of the room.
SHOULD INDIVIDUALS BE ALLOWED TO COLLECT NAZI ARTIFACTS?
SHOULD INDIVIDUALS BE ALLOWED TO COLLECT NAZI…
SHOULD INDIVIDUALS BE ALLOWED TO COLLECT NAZI ARTIFACTS?
They say that a man’s home is his castle but it would probably be more accurate to say that a man’s (or a woman’s) home is his museum. Most of us tend to accumulate artifacts related to the subjects that interest us. Movie fans often fill their walls with movie posters. Or perhaps they have an album filled with the autographed photos of famous actors, or a shelf full of books about the cinema. The musicians I know tend to fill their houses with guitars, keyboards, vinyl record albums, concert posters, and other such stuff. The home of one of my neighbors is a veritable shrine to the works of artist and author Edward Gorey. My wife and I once knew a man who was passionate about two high-quality brands: Rolls Royce and National Geographic. The large living room of his Silicon Valley home was a monument to both brands. When you entered his front door you saw that the left side of room was completely dedicated to National Geographic memorabilia. The right side was completely dedicated to Rolls Royce memorabilia. An invisible line seemed to run down the middle of the room.