What "leather jackets and thick jumpers"?
2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 16:02Those "terrorists" thrown off the plane? They looked suspicious because they were wearing heavy clothes and sweaters? Bullshit.
One of the racist gits tries to defend the hysteria:
They're confiscating books they don't like the look off, and removing people from planes because they're brown, even if they're a fully qualified airline pilot on a staff ticket. Let's here it for sane and rational shall we?
The friends deny claims they were wearing heavy leather jackets which aroused suspicion. They insist they merely had on light windcheaters, T-shirts and jeans.(via)
One of the racist gits tries to defend the hysteria:
But lecturer Jo Schofield - travelling with husband Heath and daughter Isabel, 12 - tried to explain why panic gripped the 150 passengers on the flight.Lecturer. She's a lecturer. Would you want her teaching you or your kids? The men looked "dodgy". Why, because they're brown and spoke Urdu?
She said: "Everyone agreed the men looked dodgy. Some passengers were very panicky and in tears. There was a lot of talking about terrorists."
They're confiscating books they don't like the look off, and removing people from planes because they're brown, even if they're a fully qualified airline pilot on a staff ticket. Let's here it for sane and rational shall we?
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 15:22 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 15:50 (UTC)The Indie rang a series of articles a couple of months ago after someone carrying the paper - with a headline critical of (if I remember correctly) the war in Iraq - was arrested for political activity - I think it was near Parliament, and they were subject to the new law banning demonstrations within so many yards of Westminster. (Heaven forbid that any political activity happens near - or in! - Parliament...)
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 15:54 (UTC)If I were in London next week, I'd do Mark Thomas/Rachel's latest thing, but I can't make it; I'll post a plug for it later though.
The law is SOCPA, because ringing a bell at the cenotaph is a Serious Organised Crime...
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 16:25 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 17:04 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 20:53 (UTC)Was bad. Just so y'know.
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 20:55 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-24, Thursday 14:01 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 17:05 (UTC)It would be funny if it wasn't so scary.
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-23, Wednesday 20:15 (UTC)I agree - let's hear it for sane and rational. After all, they appear to have had the good sense to get out of the situation nice and early...
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-24, Thursday 18:49 (UTC)Except, it seems, they're mostly hanging out on LJ, so very few people, even on communities that attract wingnuts, seem to think these moves make any sense at all.
Demographics, education levels, etc I guess.
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-24, Thursday 14:20 (UTC)The underlying current of fear, the slow errosion of liberties and the long indoctrination policies to fear certain individuals or ideas is now really starting to pay off.
Lets look at this plane incident as an example - high levels of media saturated garbage and drivel to induce a huge fear of planes been blown up (by, quite frankly, chemically improbable means) by terrorists (and by terrorists, of course the media indicates 'arabs looking men with beards'). Sadly the brain is very good at associating things like this together - they see arab men in photos and on tv associated with the constant warnings of terrorists, association comes into play.
People follow each other like herds, most of the time this serves them pretty well, not having to think critically in a lot of actions removes potentially difficult decisions and of course absolution from responsibility for action.
Queue one person on a plane making a 'those men look dodgy comment and before you know it click, whhhhr in pops all those automated unconcious behaviours the government and media have been planting for the last few years, even if they didn't mean to, and you have a mob on your hands.
You can tell how wonderfully indoctrinated they have become, people were in tears.
Once you start looking everything feels so manipulative. I don't go out much anymore.
It could just be the paranoia though.
Could...
"Mine is the first generation able to contemplate the possibility that we may live our entire lives without going to war or sending our children to war. " - Tony Blair
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-24, Thursday 15:20 (UTC)I've got a tinfoil helmet check y'see, and I have to make sure I'm not going all loony. Regularly. Whenever I think about this sort of thing for too long.
Yes, people are now associating because of all the media coverage, but I don't think that was the intentional effect. It may be I'm wrong.
no subject
Date: 2006-Aug-24, Thursday 18:03 (UTC)It's hard to imagine that some of the people in charge don't recognise the way they can use fear to manipulate people. The only question is who's doing it, how much and with how much precision.
Also, I think even for those who are not consciously manipulating it, or if you don't believe there is a conscious manipulation, I'd argue that it is a necessary but contingent part of the political system that has developed. In that something needed to replace the general dissolution of positive political ideology and fear fulfills that role. Those involved at least implicitly recognise its utility and are unwilling to challenge its primacy.
Incidentally, on the 'heavy clothing while it's really warm' charge, uh yeah... well Schiphol's about a hundred square miles of air conditioning, and planes aren't exactly kept at the outside temperature...