[Updates, two so far, at end of post]
The obedient hackery of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre is always on the lookout for any dirt it can get on followers of The Prophet. Sometimes they can get a little too keen, as a story from the south coast on the topical meeting of long, hot summer days and the Islamic holy month of Ramadan has been splashed by the paper in an effort to pretend that Muslims are bossing everyone else.
The obedient hackery of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre is always on the lookout for any dirt it can get on followers of The Prophet. Sometimes they can get a little too keen, as a story from the south coast on the topical meeting of long, hot summer days and the Islamic holy month of Ramadan has been splashed by the paper in an effort to pretend that Muslims are bossing everyone else.
What's f***ing wrong with kicking Muslims, c***?!?
“Teachers
'denied schoolboy, 10, water on the hottest day of the year to avoid upsetting
Muslim pupils during Ramadan'” howls the headline, as readers are told
the story of Kora Blagden and her son Luke, who attends the Charles Dickens
Primary School. But those familiar with the dictates of the Qur’an may have
already noticed that something is not quite right about this one.
Fasting, for followers of The Prophet during Ramadan, does
not include banning the drinking of water. Given the part of the world where
Islam began, this should not surprise anyone. So someone is being economical
with the actualité here. And, for a
paper that specialises in digging around social media sites when on the lookout
for anything that will embarrass their targets, the Mail has been slacking.
Behold the Daily Mail's heroine
Take Kora Blagden,
for starters. And take one look
at her Facebook page to see a less than Daily
Mail compliant profile picture. Then simply click “About”, scroll down to “Likes”,
click on “Sports Teams” and the very first image is The Firms. Who they? Well, this is “The
internet’s number one place for all things football casuals ... in no way do we
condone violence”. Yeah, right.
"The Firms"? Who they?
That would explain
the header image, showing four men wearing protective clothing, disguising
their faces, and carrying an imaginative array of weaponry. And the British
Rail symbol also gives a clue: anyone who can remember that far back knows all
about “The Inter-City Firm”. We are
talking serious football hooliganism here. So it doesn’t get into grounds
nowadays? It didn’t go away.
That's who ...
Exemplifying the
casuals’ mentality is a blog post titled “Meet
the disrespectful Commie who ripped up Lee Rigby flowers”, about Sarah
Marshall of the Doncaster Free Press, who did no such thing, although it is
entirely possible that she was present at the EDL rally where there was an
incident at Sheffield cenotaph. Contact details for her were given out. Threats were
made.
Sadly for the EDL and their pals in the casuals, however,
the photo was not of Sarah Marshall. But they have a grim
track record in threatening journalists and attempting to curb press
freedom. Yes, the Daily Mail, supposed
champion of press freedom, is running a story from someone who supports those
who would curtail it. And Muslim scare stories from that quarter do not suggest
lack of bias.
But it’s interesting
to shine some light on Paul Dacre’s new-found friends.
[UPDATE1 1720 hours: one source mentioned that those not at all Islamophobic or racist people who support UKIP have been having their ninepence worth about this "story", and a visit to Facebook confirmed it: some most unfortunate comments have been made during the past 24 hours.
First example is a post from Bev Jones, to whom one fellow Kipper proclaimed "We are not a Middle East society, 500 years behind the rest of humanity". Another demanded to know "What nationality/religion was the teacher?"
Then came the priceless "The teacher in question should be prosecuted for child cruelty and discrimination against a child that actually belongs here" [my emphasis].
Another thread was started by Dino Fancellu, with the comparatively modest addition of "WTF?!"
One wag suggested "I bet they asked kids to wake up at 3am to watch Chanel [sic] 4 as part of home work" before Fancellu reminded his fellow Kippers "It's all part of the agenda, bow down to everything non English. You have to remember that the public sector is run by the Left, from top to bottom", before leaving a reference about Common Purpose.
So that's a slice of opinion from the followers of a Real Mainstream Political Party, wound up with a good stiff dose of paranoia. I'm sure Nigel "Thirsty" Farage is happy to welcome them all]
[UPDATE2 14 July 1350 hours: since the post was published, I've been told that many Muslims do not even have water between dawn and dusk, although this advice does vary a bit. What does not vary is that children who have not yet reached adolescence are not compelled to take part in fasting, which means 10 year olds. That is yet another reason not to believe Kora Blagden's story.
Meanwhile, other media outlets have been suckered into running this tale, even the normally sane Mirror (along with the usual batshit commenters). And the HuffPost UK has also run it - apparently from the PA Wire, which is presumably why so many are taking it as fact.
What is not being stressed in all these reports is that the school has stressed that it does not prevent any of its pupils from having access to water, should they need it. Perhaps the PA, and all those trusting the wire copy, should have another think about running stories that do not add up]
[UPDATE1 1720 hours: one source mentioned that those not at all Islamophobic or racist people who support UKIP have been having their ninepence worth about this "story", and a visit to Facebook confirmed it: some most unfortunate comments have been made during the past 24 hours.
First example is a post from Bev Jones, to whom one fellow Kipper proclaimed "We are not a Middle East society, 500 years behind the rest of humanity". Another demanded to know "What nationality/religion was the teacher?"
Then came the priceless "The teacher in question should be prosecuted for child cruelty and discrimination against a child that actually belongs here" [my emphasis].
Another thread was started by Dino Fancellu, with the comparatively modest addition of "WTF?!"
One wag suggested "I bet they asked kids to wake up at 3am to watch Chanel [sic] 4 as part of home work" before Fancellu reminded his fellow Kippers "It's all part of the agenda, bow down to everything non English. You have to remember that the public sector is run by the Left, from top to bottom", before leaving a reference about Common Purpose.
So that's a slice of opinion from the followers of a Real Mainstream Political Party, wound up with a good stiff dose of paranoia. I'm sure Nigel "Thirsty" Farage is happy to welcome them all]
[UPDATE2 14 July 1350 hours: since the post was published, I've been told that many Muslims do not even have water between dawn and dusk, although this advice does vary a bit. What does not vary is that children who have not yet reached adolescence are not compelled to take part in fasting, which means 10 year olds. That is yet another reason not to believe Kora Blagden's story.
Meanwhile, other media outlets have been suckered into running this tale, even the normally sane Mirror (along with the usual batshit commenters). And the HuffPost UK has also run it - apparently from the PA Wire, which is presumably why so many are taking it as fact.
What is not being stressed in all these reports is that the school has stressed that it does not prevent any of its pupils from having access to water, should they need it. Perhaps the PA, and all those trusting the wire copy, should have another think about running stories that do not add up]
re:'Fasting, for followers of The Prophet during Ramadan, does not include banning the drinking of water.'
ReplyDeleteI am afraid this point is factually incorrect. As someone who has lived in various countries in the middle East over the past 11yrs it is made quite clear that nothing, including water, must pass the lips during the sunlight hours. The only exception to this is if one's health is in danger.
Apart from that a very good article on DM twisting the truth, as always.
Regards,
adey
Although you are correct about the non intake of water, Ummbab, children who are not yet adolescent are exempt from fasting. Since this schoolboy is ten years old, he is not adolescent and therefore is not allowed to fast.
ReplyDeleteAudacity,
ReplyDeleteNon-adolescent children are indeed not expected to fast. However, they are not 'not allowed to fast'. Most pre-adolescents emulate their families and wider community and fast for a period of time in the day during Ramadam. This is from a non-UK perspective, and I only inform you as to what happens in the Middle East.
Regards,
adey
It's the Dail Mail - what more do you expect?
ReplyDeleteThe only query I would have is whether it is a deliberate rascist ploy by the DM or just another example of cut price journalism that suits their agenda? Or both?
Or even "mendacious smears" as Hugh Grant might add - I couldn't possibly comment (Mr Caplan rises to his feet.......)?
I have been looking up similar issues to other people here - water, age when fasting becomes encouraged and then obligatory. The information about the complainant is telling.
ReplyDelete