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date: Sun, 2 Dec 2007 21:40:38 -0000,    group: uk.media.radio.bbc-r4        back       
Re: Mohammed teddy bear?   
On Dec 1, 8:20 pm, "Wim Jay"  wrote:

> She was not in Rome, you stupid Islamic Kunt. If she had been in Rome and
> had agreed to the children calling the Teddy Bear "the Pope" no one would
> have prosecuted her. If she had been in England and had agreed to the
> children calling the Teddy Bear "Jesus" no one would have complained. Even
> if she had been in Israel and called the Teddy Bear G-d there would have
> been no court case though some nutters like you might have complained.

All those religions have persecuted peopel for what they said, but it
didn't involve
teddy bears so it is OK. It's Good Denial of Free Speech unless it
involves teddy bears.
date: Sun, 2 Dec 2007 09:57:23 -0800 (PST)   author:   1Z

Re: Mohammed teddy bear?   
On Dec 2, 7:18 pm, "Mr Pounder"  wrote:
> "Naked Gonad"  wrote in message
>
> news:e00913de-0067-4e21-953d-603cac98c731@o42g2000hsc.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
> > On Dec 2, 5:57 pm, 1Z  wrote:
> >> On Dec 1, 8:20 pm, "Wim Jay"  wrote:
>
> >> > She was not in Rome, you stupid Islamic Kunt. If she had been in Rome
> >> > and
> >> > had agreed to the children calling the Teddy Bear "the Pope" no one
> >> > would
> >> > have prosecuted her. If she had been in England and had agreed to the
> >> > children calling the Teddy Bear "Jesus" no one would have complained.
> >> > Even
> >> > if she had been in Israel and called the Teddy Bear G-d there would
> >> > have
> >> > been no court case though some nutters like you might have complained.
>
> >> All those religions have persecuted peopel for what they said, but it
> >> didn't involve
> >> teddy bears so it is OK. It's Good Denial of Free Speech unless it
> >> involves teddy bears.
>
> > I hear that a Jihad has been ordered on all Teddy Bears called Simon(I
> > don't know why).
>
> > Gonad
>
> Well done for understanding that last paragraph.
>
> Mr Pounder

I did'nt

Gonad
date: Sun, 2 Dec 2007 11:23:24 -0800 (PST)   author:   Naked Gonad

Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
'Jonathan Bate presents a series examining historical events through the
poetry they inspired.

Linton Kwesi Johnson's poem Di Great Insohreckshan recalls the Brixton riots
of April 1981. The work is now acknowledged alongside television and radio
archive as a primary source, helping future generations understand the
cultural and political upheaval that spilt onto the streets of south
London.'

Usual one-sided view from the Beeb.

I'm reminded of 'Pull the Tregros' by National Lampoon.
date: Sun, 2 Dec 2007 21:40:38 -0000   author:   Clive G -nospam

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
"Clive G" <okeydokey@f2s.com-nospam> wrote in message 
news:ZIydnT3Ot-iru87anZ2dnUVZ8tSdnZ2d@pipex.net...
> 'Jonathan Bate presents a series examining historical events through the
> poetry they inspired.
>
> Linton Kwesi Johnson's poem Di Great Insohreckshan recalls the Brixton 
> riots
> of April 1981. The work is now acknowledged alongside television and radio
> archive as a primary source, helping future generations understand the
> cultural and political upheaval that spilt onto the streets of south
> London.'
>
> Usual one-sided view from the Beeb.
>
> I'm reminded of 'Pull the Tregros' by National Lampoon.
>
>

The BBC sees the Brixton riots as the triumph of the oppressed over The Man. 
Actually, it was the beginning of a long decline to our current situation: 
emasculated police, political correctness - and 25 kids shot or stabbed 
since January. How those fucking idiots at the beeb can't see it is beyond 
me.

ROBBIE
date: Mon, 3 Dec 2007 21:18:14 -0000   author:   ROBBIE

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
ROBBIE wrote:
> "Clive G" <okeydokey@f2s.com-nospam> wrote in message 
> news:ZIydnT3Ot-iru87anZ2dnUVZ8tSdnZ2d@pipex.net...
>> 'Jonathan Bate presents a series examining historical events through the
>> poetry they inspired.
>>
>> Linton Kwesi Johnson's poem Di Great Insohreckshan recalls the Brixton 
>> riots
>> of April 1981. The work is now acknowledged alongside television and radio
>> archive as a primary source, helping future generations understand the
>> cultural and political upheaval that spilt onto the streets of south
>> London.'
>>
>> Usual one-sided view from the Beeb.
>>
>> I'm reminded of 'Pull the Tregros' by National Lampoon.
>>
>>
> 
> The BBC sees the Brixton riots as the triumph of the oppressed over The Man. 
> Actually, it was the beginning of a long decline to our current situation: 
> emasculated police, political correctness - and 25 kids shot or stabbed 
> since January. How those fucking idiots at the beeb can't see it is beyond 
> me.
> 
> ROBBIE 
> 
> 

That cretin Zepheniah was on the wireless yesterday. Remarkably, for 
someone born here fifty years ago, he hasn't made an effort to acquire 
the accent, dress, or any semblance of loyalty to his native country. If 
he hates it so much here why doesn't he just fuck off somewhere else, 
and why do those treacherous goons at the BBC keep funnelling him 
British licence payer's money?

Compare and contrast Lewis Hamilton. His ancestors came here at about 
the same time, worked their socks off, his dad juggled three jobs at 
once to keep him in karting, and instead of whining about oppression and 
slavery and tilting at windmills, he's out there doing a spectacular job 
  with genuine modesty.
date: Mon, 03 Dec 2007 22:19:08 +0000   author:   turnitup same@same

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
On 3 Dec, 22:19, turnitup <same@same> wrote:

> That cretin Zepheniah was on the wireless yesterday. Remarkably, for
> someone born here fifty years ago, he hasn't made an effort to acquire
> the accent, dress, or any semblance of loyalty to his native country. If
> he hates it so much here why doesn't he just fuck off somewhere else,

Why don't you? You do nothing but moan.
date: Tue, 4 Dec 2007 04:30:42 -0800 (PST)   author:   1Z

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
On 3 Dec, 21:18, "ROBBIE"  wrote:
> "Clive G" <okeydo...@f2s.com-nospam> wrote in message

> The BBC sees the Brixton riots as the triumph of the oppressed over The Man.
> Actually, it was the beginning of a long decline to our current situation:

Interesting use of the word "actually" there.

> emasculated police, political correctness - and 25 kids shot or stabbed
> since January. How those fucking idiots at the beeb can't see it is beyond
> me.

That would be ... because its just some idea that floated into your
head one day.
date: Tue, 4 Dec 2007 04:32:03 -0800 (PST)   author:   1Z

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
Clive G wrote:
> 
> 'Jonathan Bate presents a series examining historical events through the
> poetry they inspired.
> 
> Linton Kwesi Johnson's poem Di Great Insohreckshan recalls the Brixton riots
> of April 1981. The work is now acknowledged alongside television and radio
> archive as a primary source, helping future generations understand the
> cultural and political upheaval that spilt onto the streets of south
> London.'

If an equal amount of damage had been caused by chavs going on the
rampage and it had been recorded by a chav "poet" I don't think the BBC
would be interested.

-- 
How unlike the home life of our own dear Queen.
Remove "antispam" and ".invalid" for e-mail address.
date: Tue, 04 Dec 2007 12:54:25 GMT   author:   Frederick Williams Frederick Williams@antispamhotmail.co.uk.invalid

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
turnitup wrote:
> 
> ROBBIE wrote:
> > "Clive G" <okeydokey@f2s.com-nospam> wrote in message
> > news:ZIydnT3Ot-iru87anZ2dnUVZ8tSdnZ2d@pipex.net...
> >> 'Jonathan Bate presents a series examining historical events through the
> >> poetry they inspired.
> >>
> >> Linton Kwesi Johnson's poem Di Great Insohreckshan recalls the Brixton
> >> riots
> >> of April 1981. The work is now acknowledged alongside television and radio
> >> archive as a primary source, helping future generations understand the
> >> cultural and political upheaval that spilt onto the streets of south
> >> London.'
> >>
> >> Usual one-sided view from the Beeb.
> >>
> >> I'm reminded of 'Pull the Tregros' by National Lampoon.
> >>
> >>
> >
> > The BBC sees the Brixton riots as the triumph of the oppressed over The Man.
> > Actually, it was the beginning of a long decline to our current situation:
> > emasculated police, political correctness - and 25 kids shot or stabbed
> > since January. How those fucking idiots at the beeb can't see it is beyond
> > me.
> >
> > ROBBIE
> >
> >
> 
> That cretin Zepheniah was on the wireless yesterday. Remarkably, for
> someone born here fifty years ago, he hasn't made an effort to acquire
> the accent, dress, or any semblance of loyalty to his native country. If
> he hates it so much here why doesn't he just fuck off somewhere else,
> and why do those treacherous goons at the BBC keep funnelling him
> British licence payer's money?
> 
> Compare and contrast Lewis Hamilton. His ancestors came here at about
> the same time, worked their socks off, his dad juggled three jobs at
> once to keep him in karting, and instead of whining about oppression and
> slavery and tilting at windmills, he's out there doing a spectacular job
>   with genuine modesty.

Hasn't he gone to Switzerland?  Or, as you would put it, has he not
fucked off somewhere else?

-- 
How unlike the home life of our own dear Queen.
Remove "antispam" and ".invalid" for e-mail address.
date: Tue, 04 Dec 2007 12:56:25 GMT   author:   Frederick Williams Frederick Williams@antispamhotmail.co.uk.invalid

Re: Red Sky at Night... Brixton's Alight   
>> That cretin Zepheniah was on the wireless yesterday. Remarkably, for
>> someone born here fifty years ago, he hasn't made an effort to acquire
>> the accent, dress, or any semblance of loyalty to his native country. If
>> he hates it so much here why doesn't he just fuck off somewhere else,
>> and why do those treacherous goons at the BBC keep funnelling him
>> British licence payer's money?
>>
>> Compare and contrast Lewis Hamilton. His ancestors came here at about
>> the same time, worked their socks off, his dad juggled three jobs at
>> once to keep him in karting, and instead of whining about oppression and
>> slavery and tilting at windmills, he's out there doing a spectacular job
>>   with genuine modesty.
> 
> Hasn't he gone to Switzerland?  Or, as you would put it, has he not
> fucked off somewhere else?
> 

You're right. He probably felt that he was sick of subsidising the 
Zaphaniahs of this world.
date: Tue, 04 Dec 2007 19:26:46 +0000   author:   turnitup same@same

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