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Level playing field that's all we ask.
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http://tinyurl.com/3x5zoys
So this chap was threatened by a £1,000 fine if he did not take down his 'Lost Cat posters'.
I wonder if those Muslims who posted their 'Anti Christmas posters' were likewise threatened?
http://tinyurl.com/259ze43
I don't think so somehow, I wonder why?
So this chap was threatened by a £1,000 fine if he did not take down his 'Lost Cat posters'.
I wonder if those Muslims who posted their 'Anti Christmas posters' were likewise threatened?
http://tinyurl.com/259ze43
I don't think so somehow, I wonder why?
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No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. 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."... so you can hardly damn AOG for comparing the two. "
They aren't being compared.
I know it, you know it ... and AOG sure a **** knows it.
Now, if Mr. Catpanderer had been in Tower Hamlets and been asked to take down the posters in Tower Hamlets by Tower Hamlets Council, then yes, of course you can compare the two stories ... but this wasn't the case, was it now?
They aren't being compared.
I know it, you know it ... and AOG sure a **** knows it.
Now, if Mr. Catpanderer had been in Tower Hamlets and been asked to take down the posters in Tower Hamlets by Tower Hamlets Council, then yes, of course you can compare the two stories ... but this wasn't the case, was it now?
Naz, oh, but they are being compared and quite rightly so. I repeat, we're not talking about local council rules - the Muslim posters should have been dealt with immediately not by the council, but by the law of the land. If anything is blatantly racist and deliberately designed to create offence, that poster is. I think AOG has made a very valid point and good for him.
NazNomad
This evil poster campaign was not just in London, it was nationwide.
http://tinyurl.com/36636h6
I take great offence at my posts criticising Muslim/Islam as 'Muslim Bashing', they are all perfectly legal criticism against the offensive acts perpetrated by Muslims against this country, it's traditions, and it's peoples.
This evil poster campaign was not just in London, it was nationwide.
http://tinyurl.com/36636h6
I take great offence at my posts criticising Muslim/Islam as 'Muslim Bashing', they are all perfectly legal criticism against the offensive acts perpetrated by Muslims against this country, it's traditions, and it's peoples.
One big difference would be the phone number/ contact details.
Cat poster, genuine contact details without any concerns about hiding identity. (possibly even a landline number and an address)
Christmas poster, almost certainly a unregistered mobile number and if anyone does answer it they won't say where they are or who they are.
It's pretty difficult to fine anyone when you don't know who they are.
Cat poster, genuine contact details without any concerns about hiding identity. (possibly even a landline number and an address)
Christmas poster, almost certainly a unregistered mobile number and if anyone does answer it they won't say where they are or who they are.
It's pretty difficult to fine anyone when you don't know who they are.
Although we cannot prove it, I believe those seeking to explain the different handling of these two matters by virtue of the fact that they were handled by different councils are misguided.
Despite the fact that these two matters were handled by two quite different councils I believe they would have been treated in just the same way as they were had they been dealt with by the same council. I do not believe that Bedfordshire council would have pursued the anti-Christmas posters with as much vigour as they persecuted the cat owner (that is if they pursued it at all and especially if it occurred in, say Luton). Similarly I do not believe that Tower Hamlets council would have ignored the cat owner’s posters in the same way as they did the anti-Christmas offerings. Yes, it’s quite true that apprehending the anti-Christians may be more difficult, but with the council’s powers afforded to them by RIPA (the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act) they should not have too much trouble. But I don’t think too much effort would have been made anyway.
Perhaps the easiest way to understand AOG’s point would be to consider what the reaction of Tower Hamlets Council officers would have been if the posters had suggested that the festival of Eid at the end of Ramadan is “evil”. It would be interesting to know how long they would have lasted in somewhere like Brick Lane.
Despite the fact that these two matters were handled by two quite different councils I believe they would have been treated in just the same way as they were had they been dealt with by the same council. I do not believe that Bedfordshire council would have pursued the anti-Christmas posters with as much vigour as they persecuted the cat owner (that is if they pursued it at all and especially if it occurred in, say Luton). Similarly I do not believe that Tower Hamlets council would have ignored the cat owner’s posters in the same way as they did the anti-Christmas offerings. Yes, it’s quite true that apprehending the anti-Christians may be more difficult, but with the council’s powers afforded to them by RIPA (the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act) they should not have too much trouble. But I don’t think too much effort would have been made anyway.
Perhaps the easiest way to understand AOG’s point would be to consider what the reaction of Tower Hamlets Council officers would have been if the posters had suggested that the festival of Eid at the end of Ramadan is “evil”. It would be interesting to know how long they would have lasted in somewhere like Brick Lane.
Gosh, wouldn't it help if people actually found out what the Bedfordshire incident actually involved rather than believing everything written in the paper ?
On an interview in PM on Radio 4 tonight ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qskw - the interview starts around 26 minutes into the programme), the chap did explain, very calmly, what had happened ... no sign of anger about the issue at all. Someone from Bedford council explained their side of it too ... and did also say that they wouldn't have prosecuted, but felt that Harding should be aware of the fact that, given the sheer number of posters, what he did could be interpreted as fly-posting for which the fine is £1000.
As for the Muslims, I very much doubt that, unlike Mr Harding, they put a contact phone number on their posters !
On an interview in PM on Radio 4 tonight ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qskw - the interview starts around 26 minutes into the programme), the chap did explain, very calmly, what had happened ... no sign of anger about the issue at all. Someone from Bedford council explained their side of it too ... and did also say that they wouldn't have prosecuted, but felt that Harding should be aware of the fact that, given the sheer number of posters, what he did could be interpreted as fly-posting for which the fine is £1000.
As for the Muslims, I very much doubt that, unlike Mr Harding, they put a contact phone number on their posters !