Bristolians blast Blair, Wall of Sound, Westminster Cathedral, April 3rd 2008
bristol |
peace |
opinion/analysis
Saturday April 05, 2008 10:07
by Tony

Reviving good old British Traditions at their best.
Many, not only in Iraq but also in this country, have been badly affected and our lives radically changed as we have seen the utter devastation borne of Blair’s deception, supported and strengthened by the spurious enquiries of Hutton, Butler et al.
How ever does the Catholic Church justify so elevated a pulpit to one so steeped in innocent blood?
People from Bristol join the protest in London to sound out Blair, Britain’s very own resident war criminal.

Listen up Anthony Lyndon Blair, destroyer of lives, creator of terrorism.
Well, Gordon Brown has been busy promoting Britishness so he will surely be proud of our latest initiative in reviving the ancient tradition of “Rough Musik”. And applying it to Anthony Lyndon Blair when he was invited to speak from the pulpit of Westminster Cathedral on Thursday 3rd of April at 7.00pm.
Rough Musik, appeared in Hogarthian paintings and was a great British tradition of banging pots and pans whenever an undesirable individual appeared in public. It worked in the 18th century, and it worked on Thursday night.
When we arrived outside of Westminster Cathedral around 6pm on Thursday, we were astonished at the sight of British police guarding a place of worship, with machine guns.
But what is even more surreal is the fact that Westminster Cathedral could invite a war criminal inside, let alone allow him to speak from the pulpit – has the world gone mad?
Many, not only in Iraq, have lost much thanks to Blair – Katherine Gunn of GCHQ, and Elisabeth Wilmshurst a government lawyer, to name but two. These good people would not stand by while the Blair government distorted the truth. They took the consequences of standing up for right against wrong and they should be compensated for the trauma they have suffered. They should be exonerated, Blair should be arrested. Justice must be seen to be done or our country will be the poorer.
Norman Kember, who tried to prevent the slaughter in Iraq stood in silent protest with a group of people from Pax Christi as Blair’s audience filed sheepishly past them and into Westminster Cathedral.
The Catholic Pax Christi held a silent protest from 6.30pm until 7.00pm, and then all hell of the “wall of sound” broke loose.
The racket was horrendous as more than five hundred people blasted out their rage on pots, pans and saucepan lids, It was not long before the biscuit tin being bashed by a genteel looking lady close by, had taken such a battering was that it was quite unrecognisable. Response to a despondent rage that Tony Blair, with his lies, has stolen the good name of our country from us.
Stolen our good name, and in its place has left us a country bereft of morals, bereft of role models for our youth, reputation in tatters in the eyes of the international community. Truth and justice trampled in the mire as phoney laws are milled out by the minute to paper over the cracks that appear in the wake of Tony Blair, the sham.
Blair must be brought to account for what he has done to our society, or sick Britain will never heal. Many, not just in Iraq but also in this country, have been badly affected and our lives radically changed as we have seen the utter devastation borne of Blair’s deception, supported and strengthened by the spurious enquiries of Hutton, Butler et al.
And before the cry for free speech gets rolled out, that privilege should be the premise of the honest – not liars and war criminals.
How ever does the Catholic Church justify so elevated a pulpit to one so steeped in innocent blood?

Rough musik 18th century style.

Sheep pen designated for, and ignored by, 500 demonstrators.

Enforced worship?

Police search for bombs, wages paid by tax payers.

I wish, I hope, I pray.
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