As some here might know, the Taverner primitive's paternal ancestor died this past week after suffering a series of strokes.
The Taverner primitive was constantly at the bedside, no doubt checking the labels on the tan transparent bottles of pharmaceuticals, to see if any of them might be worth adding to his personal inventory.
Anyway, and this is a serious question:
Should the DUmpster disallow campfires wherein the original topic is a primitive mourning the loss of a relative?
The DUmpster currently does not forbid posting campfires of any topic over which the primitives wiggle-waggle their armpits.
The DUmpster especially does not forbid posting campfires from Skins's island in which the death of a primitive is announced; after all, the sooner the demise of the primitives, the better for humanity.
But these are two different animals here, the death of a primitive and the death of a relative of a primitive.
As one can gather from the primitives' Thanksgiving and Christmas campfires, the relatives of primitives seem to be pretty decent and civilized people, and so when they pass from this time and place, one of course hopes that God has mercy on their souls.
One might, or might not, recall that when the big guy from Bellevue's mother died a year and a half ago, that campfire was hustled into a non-public forum here, because while we all felt a Great Sorrow for the big guy's maternal ancestress, it got contentious because sob-sisters here thought we should feel sorry for the big guy too, while the more sensible of us thought God commanded that we feel sorry for the big guy's mother only, and to Hell with her lazy squalid son.
I suggest to our sob-sisters that their compassion is misplaced; all this "love thy neighbor as thyself," "judge not lest ye be judged," "turn the other cheek," "do unto others as you would have them do unto you," &c., &c., &c., do not mean what they superficially seem to mean.
If one wants to know what they really mean, there are plenty of Judaic, Christian, and yes, even Moslem, theologians who've studied the Scriptures at great length, and who are happy to explain.