If you don't like it, ignore it. You know fewer people would have ever seen them if they had just ignored the whole thing!
yep, its the ridiculous outrage that has caused more people to seek the "sacred" cartoon! :wink:
...death to comics :twisted:
If you don't like it, ignore it. You know fewer people would have ever seen them if they had just ignored the whole thing!
[/quote]#juan said:Juan
Just trying to damp down the "cranky whine factor a bit"...
Without the "cranky whine factor" how will we communicate? :wink: :lol: :lol:
Blackleaf said:Free speech is one thing - but using it to provoke Muslim outrage worldwide is another.
The Foreign Office's private view is that the decisions to publish elsewhere in Europe verge on Islamophobia. Mr Straw's comments were later echoed by the US government, which described the cartoons as "offensive to the beliefs of Muslims" and criticised the European press. A US state department spokeswoman, Janelle Hironimus, said: "Inciting religious or ethnic hatred in this manner is not acceptable."
The Guardian.
Virtual Burlesque said:What insightful investigative report into the state of our society may we expect next from Jyllands-Posten?
They might send some clowns over to slaughter a few cows in Calcutta?
Set up a birth control kiosk in the Vatican?
Sponsor a Million-Queer March through Houston, Texas?
Toro said:I'm disappointed that the US and the UK have come out in the manner they have. They should be sticking up for freedom of the press first and foremost.