10/15/2012
In Britain, hostile Muslims made it abundantly clear that they donât want to assimilate to the basic western principle of free speech, an integral part of representative government. An estimated ten thousand staged a protest against the Google office in Londonistan because the company owns Youtube which continues to to host a disliked video considered to be anti-Islam.
Below, unfriendly Islamics complained about free speech at Londonâs Google headquarters.
The complaints against the internet search engine are somewhat ironic, since many wanna-be jihadists have likely used Google to find bomb-making instructions or supplies. Some killers-for-Allah have self-radicalized using the internet, like Brooklyn high-school dropout Betim Kaziu who plotted to murder American soldiers and illegal alien aspiring Capitol bomber Amine El Khalifi. The web is huge part of the modern jihad against western civilization, and Google is a central component of the internet.
Great Britain used to be a more civilized place before they started the diverse immigration of Muslims. America will see the same sort of behavior if Muslim immigration is allowed to continue here.
Muslims protest âage of mockeryâ as thousands descend on Google HQ, Daily Telegraph, October 14, 2012
Thousands of Muslims have pledged a series of protests against Google HQ for a âhateful and offensiveâ anti-Islam video, saying they now live in an âage of mockeryâ.
A protest by 10,000 Muslims outside the offices of Google in London today is just the first in an orchestrated attempt to force the company to remove an anti-Islamic film from website YouTube in Britain.
Thousands had travelled from as far afield as Glasgow to take part in the demonstration, ahead of a planned million-strong march in Hyde Park in coming weeks.
Anger over âThe Innocence of Muslimsâ, an American-produced film which insults the Prophet Mohammad and demeans Muslims, according to protesters, remains available to watch on the website YouTube, a subsidiary of Google.
Organiser Masoud Alam said: âOur next protest will be at the offices of Google and YouTube across the world. We are looking to ban this film.
âThis is not freedom of expression, there is a limit for that. This insult of the Prophet will not be allowed.
The groupâs next action was a march Mr Alam hoped would be âa million strongâ would take place in Hyde Park âin the next few weeksâ, he said.
âUntil it is banned we will keep protesting,â he added.
Todayâs demonstration was the third organised in a month, and took place on the central London street where the website search giant has its UK headquarters. A demonstration outside the American Embassy in London last month drew little attention as protests in Libya, Tunisia and Yemen dominated headlines, including the storming of embassy in Benghazi, Libya, that led to the death of the US Ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens.
Barricades were erected in front of Googleâs headquarters and a crowd bearing placards with the words âWe love our prophet more than our livesâ and âProphet Muhammad is the founder of freedom of speechâ had amassed by lunchtime.
Speeches by more than a dozen imams in a mixture of Arabic, Urdu, and English urged Muslims to honour the name of the Prophet and not to back down in the face of Googleâs continuing reluctance to act, and were met with passionate cries of âGod is Greatâ and âMohammad is the Prophet of Godâ in Arabic.
One of the speakers, Sheikh Faiz Al-Aqtab Siddiqui, told The Daily Telegraph: âTerrorism is not just people who kill human bodies, but who kill human feelings as well. The makers of this film have terrorised 1.6 billion people.
âOrganisations like Google are key players and have to take responsibility for civility. You canât just say it doesnât matter that itâs freedom of speech. Itâs anarchy.â
Sheikh Siddiqui, a barrister from Nuneaton, said he wanted to form a coalition with the Church of England, Catholics, Jewish groups, Trade Unions and even Conservatives to encourage their ranks to join his âcampaign for civilityâ.
âWe want everyone in society to recognise these people are wrecking our fragile global society. We want the Church, the Synod, Jewish groups and establishment figures involved,â he said.
As many as 800 imams in mosques across Britain helped to organise todayâs protest, which lasted four hours and blocked roads almost up to the Queenâs doorstep on Buckingham Palace Road.
Muslims from Blackburn, Birmingham, Glasgow, Luton, Manchester and Peterborough were in attendance. When asked where where the women attending the protest were, one protester replied: âRight at the backâ.
Self-employed businessman Ahmed Nasar said he was worried the video could lead to violence in Britain in the same way as it had abroad. âIf you push people too far,â he said, âYou will turn the peaceful elements into violence.â
A YouTube spokesperson said: âWe work hard to create a community everyone can enjoy and which also enables people to express different opinions.
âThis can be a challenge because whatâs OK in one country can be offensive elsewhere. This video â which is widely available on the Web â is clearly within our guidelines and so will stay on YouTube.â