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Saturday, July 16, 2011

Pastafarian Niko Alm and the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

Hey Niko, you are so cool playing around the existent law:)..Pastafarian..ups...Indeed, you have a point by testing the law

Man tests law by claiming to be a 'pastafarian' - Yahoo! News

 

Niko Alm wanted to test an Austrian law saying that head coverings would only be allowed in official documents for religious reasons.

So the tongue-in-cheek atheist applied for a new driver's license in his country with a photo of himself wearing a pasta strainer as headgear. Alm said he was a "pastafarian" and that the headpiece was required by his religion.

The application process took three years, but Alm said Thursday that he's now got his new license.

Police officials in the mostly Catholic country did not sound amused.

They said religion was never an issue in Alm's case, and that he succeeded because he fulfilled the only criterion required: leaving his face fully visible in the photo.

 

Austrian Niko Alm fought for three years before he was able to take his driver's license photo. Austrian authorities had issues with Alm's preferred headgear: a pasta strainer.

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But this week he finally was able to take the picture how he wanted, thanks to Austria's religious freedom laws. Alm is a self-described member of "the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster," which is spiking off the charts in Yahoo! Search. The satirical religion, also known as "pastafarianism," rejects creationism and says that an invisible flying spaghetti monster created the universe. The spaghetti church, which is headed by a "pastafarian primavera," was founded in 2005 when Kansas schools were under pressure to teach the theory of intelligent design rather than evolution. On his blog, Alm wrote, "Today I was able to get my new driving license, and in it you can clearly see that I'm wearing a colander on my head to demonstrate my allegiance to the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster." It took three years for Alm to be able to take the photo, because he had to prove that he was psychologically fit to drive.

Lady Gaga's been dethroned as the queen of Facebook. Rihanna snatched her crown at around noon yesterday when she gained more Facebook fans than Gaga. Even though Rihanna now has 40,576,000 fans to Gaga's 40,551,000, she's still 3 million shy of Facebook's king: Eminem. Just FYI, 46,754,784 people live in Spain. Angry Gaga fans have taken to Twitter try to get people to "unlike" Rihanna. But it's not all that bad for Lady Gaga, who still rules Twitter, with 11.6 million followers. (Though Justin Bieber's hot on her trail with just over 11 million.)

Lastly, the months of anticipation for Harry Potter fans is finally over today with the release of "The Deathly Hallows -- Part 2." But the hype hasn't stopped on social media. Harry Potter Facebook updates and wall posts hit the social network at a rate of about one per second last night, as Potter fans flooded sold-out midnight showings of the film. Twitter's list of trending topics looks more like the credits that roll after Harry Potter movies. The trending list includes Neville Longbottom, Mrs. Weasley, and Alan Rickman. Some tweeters think Rickman, who played Severus Snape in the films, should win an Oscar. On FourSquare, Harry Potter fans got a special "badge" for attending the movie, which will get them a 25% discount on Harry Potter video games. Even though it's still opening day, the film's already brought in a reported $32 million in advance ticket sales.

Do you think Austrian authorities should have allowed Niko Alm to wear a spaghetti strainer in his driver's license photo?

 

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