I agree tbhTom said:
The Times Online said:Operation Mermant was launched in the early hours. Illuminated by a beam from a helicopter, dozens of officers in body armour used an "enforcer" battering ram to get in before donning overshoes as a sign of respect.
The BBC said:The chief of police has resigned and a number of police officers sacked due to keeping their shoes on inside a mosque in a raid that foiled a plan to murder hundreds of innocent civilians in a terrorist attack.
A spokesman for the Islamic council of Britain said "How dare they not take their shoes off, this is a breach of our freedom and Islam - they all shall be judged and hanged by Allah."
When asked about the various terrorist paraphernalia, the spokesman only responded "ah yes, but they never took THEIR FUCKING SHOES OFF, SO IT DOESNT COUNT, LOL >_< ".
In a statement, Tony Blair said "well that'll teach them to keep their shoes on inside a Mosque LOL, we couldn't possibly not pander to Islam in the current political climate".
The trial continues.
Ormorof said:Officers also found a gas mask, handcuffs, hunting knives and a walkie talkie.
OMG! arrest him he has a walkie talkie! LOL, what kind of evidence is that???
still, he should be arrested just for looking like a villain (i mean come on, hook, one eye, beard, seriously 100% text book villain!!)
Gef said:Iran Holocaust comp
By PETE BELL
Sun Online
AN ISLAMIC newspaper in Iran is to hold a competition for cartoons about the Holocaust in retaliation for the publication in Denmark of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
A spokesman for Hamshahri - one of the country's biggest papers - invited foreign cartoonists to enter the competition and said it wanted to see how open the West was to caricatures of the Holocaust.
An article in the paper asked: "Does the West extend freedom of expression to the crimes committed by the United States and Israel, or an event such as the Holocaust? Or is its freedom only for insulting
religious sanctities?"
The publication of the cartoons depicting Muhammad sparked protests across the world, with extremist Muslim groups attacking Danish embassies.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2006060288,00.html
Is that the best they could come up with?
Damini said:Well, from what I've read, what's happened is the original picture has been shown, accompanied by three other pictures - one showing Mohammed as a peadophilic demon, one showing him as a pig, and one showing a muslim woman in prayer being raped by a dog. The Imam who circulated these images has in a roundabout way admitted they are fakes, but were (paraphrased) "representative and illustrative of the opinion of Danish people about Muslims" so therefore justifiable. Apparently the cartoons as they stood didn't incite enough. It's no wonder people are getting heated when they are being mislead this greatly. It also shows that some people have a vested interest in building this anomosity. Got to worry to what ends...
TdC said:wait a minute.... so they weren't offended enough by the danish pics (which were quite mild imo tbh) [highlight]so they made their own, which were far worse and circulated those???[/highlight] Did I just read that correctly?
Damini said:
Sky said:A mosque is reported to have written to erotic retailer Ann Summers asking them to rebrand an inflatable sex doll - because it is named after a Muslim prophet.</P><P>Manchester Central Mosque said the decision to name the blow-up aid "Mustafa Shag" had caused "hurt and anguish".</P> <P>The new male doll is being sold as an "inflatable escort for your hen-night adventures", the Independent reported.</P><P>Unfortunately, Mustafa is a name given to the Prophet Mohammed.</P><P>"You have no idea how much hurt, anguish and disgust this obnoxious phrase has caused to Muslim men, women and children," the letters reads.</P><P>"We are asking you to please relent on compassionate grounds."</P><P>The call comes after a week in which the Muslim world has reacted with outrage to cartoons published in European newspapers satirising the Prophet Mohammed.</P><P>Ann Summers described the request as "political correctness gone mad".</P><P>Chief executive Jacqueline Gold said: "We don't want to offend, but this feels like political correctness gone mad.</P><P>"If anyone has a better name for a blow-up doll, please let us know."