Do You Think Britian May Realize, "Houston, we have a problem."?

Three Dollar Hooker

CAGiversary!
100,000 Muslims to vent anger in London at cartoon protest
By Nick Britten
(Filed: 09/02/2006)

Timeline: the six month road to chaos
In pictures: Muslim anger spreads

A mass demonstration of 100,000 Muslims will take place in London next weekend as anger continues over publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

The Muslim Action Committee, an umbrella group which claims to represent more than a million Muslims, said it would do as much as it could to prevent the ugly scenes seen last week when protesters carried placards issuing death threats and one man dressed as a suicide bomber.

But they said they needed to "channel" growing anger felt by communities across Britain that Muslims were being persecuted and made to feel like "second class citizens".

Faiz Saddiqi, the committee convener, said: "It is a peaceful protest. We will not let it be hijacked by the fringe elements.

"It is a way of showing the depth of anger that Muslim communities feel about being continually insulted by the publication of these images."

The march, on Feb 18, will go from Trafalgar Square to Hyde Park. Mr Saddiqi said that only banners and placards issued by the committee would be allowed.

It will be the fifth demonstration in three weeks. Around 3,000 members from Britain's Shia Muslim community will congregate in London today for the Ashura Festival, while several thousand Muslims are expected in London on Saturday for a rally. The Metropolitan Police will patrol the events as normal but said they "had plans" in place should trouble break out.

The Muslim Action Committee was convened specifically to co-ordinate a response to the growing crisis over the publication, initially in Denmark, of cartoons depicting Mohammed, which have led to worldwide protests.

Mr Saddiqi said they wanted to make clear that their fight was not a political one, but a religious one.

He said: "The whole thing is beginning to gain momentum and we felt we had to get together not only to appeal for calm but also to channel people's feelings."
London Telegraph

So, what are the odds that this is completely peaceful and not hijacked by militants?

Oh, about the same as me enjoying a nice pork roast after a shrimp cocktail, the Pope turning Mormon and Nintendo adopting the UMD format.

I think you can see more "Death to those that insult Islam.", "Behead those who insult Mohammed", "The real holocaust is yet to come." type signs during this march.

I know, I'm a horrible awful dirty Jew, Muslims just want to live in peace with the rest of us. I'll take this bet, this turns violent and ugly and Europe is shocked at the outcome of this march.

Any takers?
 
I for one hope that they keep to the promise of not letting the radical elements take over. That is all I really ask out of the Muslim communities of the world. Do not let your radical elements take over, don't let them assert their will over your own. But, we will see. Will this be peacefull and at least moderately respectfull? Or another shamefull display?
 
I'll take the bet but it depends on the odds you're giving.

If I were you I'd open the line a 1-3 to 1-5.

I think you can count on one of two things.

1. It's hijacked by the threatening sign crowd and terrorist sympathizers.

2. The soccer hooligans become completely unhinged after having seen previous protests and counter march. There's also a really nasty streak in English skinheads who aren't Nazi oriented but don't take kindly to non-traditional British citizens, aliens or illegals.

This won't end well.

Congrats BTW on making a second topic that doesn't include "Friends of AM23..." in the headline, no need to single him out, there's tons of other terrorist supporters on this board as well.
 
Yeah, that region of Europe NEVER sees any religious conflict until the muslims came rolling in. :roll:
 
No, here's a terrorist sympathizer:

bush_abdullah.jpg
 
Well that was a bloodbath:

Muslims have held their biggest rally so far in the UK in protest at cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad.
Police said 10,000 people gathered in Trafalgar Square before marching to Hyde Park. No arrests were made.

The London march was led by the Muslim Action Committee - an umbrella body for mosques and community groups.

It is the third consecutive weekend of demonstrations over the cartoons, which have prompted violent protests around the world since publication in Denmark.

The committee also launched a charter supporting a ban on religious discrimination after the march.

Organisers said there were 400 stewards to control the demonstration.

Ishmaeel Haneef, from the committee, said the demonstrations were continuing because "the provocations have not stopped".

"These things are still being republished across the world," he said, using the example of an Italian minister wearing a T-shirt depicting the cartoons.

He said the way to "get back to being a civilised world" was to "give the copyright [of the cartoons] over to the Muslim community".

Protests against the cartoons, first printed in Denmark, have taken place in Muslim countries across the world.

But the protests have not been universally supported by Muslim leaders in the UK.

Dr Guyasuddin Siddiqui, of the Muslim Parliament of Britain, said: "Muslims have the realise - the organisers, the leadership - that unless and until we carry the public opinion with us on whatever we stand for we are not going to achieve anything."

Outbreaks of violence across Pakistan have prompted Denmark to temporarily close its embassy in Islamabad.

Last week protesters waved banners calling for unity against Islamophobia in a peaceful demonstration.

Guest speakers at that event included Respect MP George Galloway and Ben Kent, friend of British hostage Norman Kember.

The Muslim Council of Britain along with the Muslim Association of Britain and a number of Christian groups, peace organisations and the Mayor of London helped organise that protest.

The event was intended to highlight the opinions of moderate Muslims after demonstrators earlier this month carried placards threatening violence through the capital.

Among the images which have sparked outcry is one of Muhammad with a bomb-shaped turban on his head.

Newspapers in Spain, Italy, Germany and France reprinted the material.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4726472.stm


And, just to point out, last night this upcoming protest was on the front page of the bbc world page. When it actually happened and it was peaceful, it was only to be found on the u.k. section of the bbc, in small print, in the corner.
 
Anyone else find it funny that, at this point, we're the only country not currently being protested by Muslims on this deal?
 
[quote name='RedvsBlue']Anyone else find it funny that, at this point, we're the only country not currently being protested by Muslims on this deal?[/QUOTE]

Maybe not in Brittian, but in many other places, pictures of bush are burned, american flags are burned, and for christ's sake, a KFC got looted !

I think it was a PETA rally or some other environmentalist conspiracy gathering.
 
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