Just over the hill, in Rotorua, a flag debate has been raging, but the flag in question holds some rather nasty connotations.
But taking offence to anything is a totally subjective process and, even if you do find the Nazi swastika abhorrent, that is no reason to hide it from view and pretend it does not exist.
Until the 1920s, the swastika was a sacred symbol in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism and meant "well-being" or "good fortune".
Since then, and especially in the Western world, it has taken on an almost opposite connotation.
Stocking the Nazi symbol for sale is not uncommon, although perhaps not displayed in the front window like Rotorua's Walter Dobbs did, and it is still a potent symbol in today's society.