Wreath cross How much are two Nazi pin/badge things worth?
I found them in my neighbors house he is 80 and has alsheimers or however you spell it and his wife let me look through his stuff and I found two Nazi badges or pins
One has two swords crossing with a swastica in a circleon top of the two swords
The other looks kinda like a wreath with an eagle holding a swastica in it's feet and a rifle lying diagonal across the wreath
Both are German Infantry Assault badges. The value is really up to the individual. WW2 paraphernalia has a big market but as you can see from some uniformed answers, the stigma of the Nazi emblems taints the opinions of many.
To all of the people who think these items are so deplorable, the swastika was the emblem of the German government at the time. These are standard Wehrmacht (army) badges.
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who is in the right/wrong?
There was a bad car wreck in front of my house, (without asking permission) there was a memorial (wreath, flowers, stuffed animals, and a cross) In my front yard.... I mowed and replaced it when done... the last time I mowed I got rid of them, the (aunt or mother not sure) knocked on my door the other day and told me how evil I was for not putting them back. I have the things in a bag to be thrown away. I thought I was doing good by leaving them there for about amonth or six weeks. I think I have a right to my yard... If they had asked ahead of time I would have ok'd it and agreed on how long it should stay. but now I am worried about some type revenge... (she wasn't nice to me nor was I to her).... what to do?
I think you expressed an appropriate level of kindness in allowing this memorial to remain for a month, and this woman was out of line to approach you.
I do not think highly of these tacky messy eternal roadside memorials to begin with. This is what we have cemeteries for. And I did lose someone in such a fashion. My Dad died in a car wreck. I did not set up a tacky memorial at the site of his demise.
An unfortunate incident does not give a person a right to the property it occurred on. People go out and set up these tacky eternal memorials and they leave them. The elements and time take toll, and they wind up a pile of rotting trash on the roadside. Case in point; I've been watching several stuffed animals rot off a light pole nearby for almost a year now.
So no, you were not out of line, she was. And now she's used up all her sympathy as well. File a police report to document this harassment.
Maybe you could offer to let them put a small wreath for a few weeks on the anniversary, if you feel you want to continue to extend kindness.
You really owe these people nothing further, and a restraining order would not be out of line if necessary.