StaticChange wrote...
Harry Potter wasn't the only one who actually used his name. Some of the other characters, such as dumbledore (and maybe lupen/sirius?) used it too. It can be assumed I think that somewhere in all the thousands of wizards in the world of Harry Potter, there would have been at least a few more not in the books with the balls (or stupidity) to say his name.
Harry Potter wasn't afraid of Voldamort thats why he could say it. Its said in the novel that Dumbledore was the only man Voldamort ever feared so of course Dumbledore would never be afraid. As for Lupen and Sirius I can't recall them ever saying it. The only group I could think of that COULD speak his name were his supports but even they didn't most of the time. They addressed him as The Dark Lord and if I recall correctly they felt they were unworthy to call him Voldamort so yeah they wouldn't.
Think about how it would've been in the real world:
You've heard about an ''hardcore'' evil guy who still even after his death spreads fear througout the known world. Ofcourse you're going to by allmost any means nessesary look up and find out who's everyone so afraid of? Am I correct?
I said before thats not the case for me. Maybe if I was alive in Russia fearing everyday that Stalins police would come and kill me I'd be afraid of his name but I wasn't SO I'M NOT. So how is it that these kids are scared? I doubt they could read something so horrible it'd scare them to this degree. What kind of parents would allow them to? What kind of library would allow this? None. I understand that the generation that lived during Voldamorts rule could fear him but not those who didn't.