ChatterBank20 mins ago
Anti Mosque Demonstration.
Should the people of Dudley be worried.
http:// www.exp ressand star.co m/news/ 2015/05 /21/far -right- marcher s-on-th e-warpa th-in-d udley/
http://
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No best answer has yet been selected by tonyav. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We have had this type of demonstration in Norwich. I was coincidently there when it happened I went to watch out of curiosity. Do they engage you in intellectual debate? NO! They fight what they see as fire with fire! They had no chance with me in the first place but what I saw just simply ashamed me!
Its part of the Far Rights campaign to disrupt ordinary peoples lives. They are incapable of doing it via the ballot box, so they are trying it by force, on the streets. If the Left turn out to disrupt these racists, then so be it. They will be doing us all a favour. If I lived closer, I would be marching in opposition as well.
I have warned here on AB in the past, that we ignore the Far Right at our peril. I have been howled down for so doing but this kind of thing is exactly what I have been afraid of.
To answer Tony's question above....yes, the people of Dudley should be worried about scum like these.
I have warned here on AB in the past, that we ignore the Far Right at our peril. I have been howled down for so doing but this kind of thing is exactly what I have been afraid of.
To answer Tony's question above....yes, the people of Dudley should be worried about scum like these.
I only discovered, from a news story the other day, that church bells are rung ***during the night***, in some parts of the UK. (Hourly chimes, not peals, but enough to keep visiting tourists awake). This is only going to make it harder to apply noise abatement regulations to new-build mosques, isn't it?
Or is discussion of such issues a de facto hate crime?
Or is discussion of such issues a de facto hate crime?
To answer your question Naomi, it appears to be a bunch of football hooligans :::::
"Members of the All Football Fans/Firms March Against Islamisation (AFFFMAI) group are planning to descend on the town on June 13"
It doesn't appear to be important enough to have its own Wiki page, but when you Google it, it takes straight to our old friends, the EDL ::
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Englis h_Defen ce_Leag ue
"Members of the All Football Fans/Firms March Against Islamisation (AFFFMAI) group are planning to descend on the town on June 13"
It doesn't appear to be important enough to have its own Wiki page, but when you Google it, it takes straight to our old friends, the EDL ::
http://
Well, it was a weird segue from the last question in Frankie Boyle's Election Autopsy to that Guardian film.
The clip talbot posted I've seen before and it bothered me at the time but, compared to the EDL hoo'ns, they were just being cocky about how things would be (ie how she'd be permitted to dress), when they "take over". It's sinister but it's not as if it's going to happen, whereas thugs will use the anonymity of a sufficiently large mob to get away with murder. (aka 8 years' free room and board).
The clip talbot posted I've seen before and it bothered me at the time but, compared to the EDL hoo'ns, they were just being cocky about how things would be (ie how she'd be permitted to dress), when they "take over". It's sinister but it's not as if it's going to happen, whereas thugs will use the anonymity of a sufficiently large mob to get away with murder. (aka 8 years' free room and board).