News that the English Defence League will hold a demonstration in Nottingham on 5th December is very disturbing.
Whilst their website is at pains to point out that they are not a ‘far-right or fascist’ organisation and neither are they racist, it is reasonable to ask who is behind this group and what their ultimate aims are, given that similar protests in other towns have ended in violence.
If their raison d’etre is, as they say, to: “awaken our sleeping Government to face up to and deal with the Jihad in our country, which threatens the very foundations of the freedoms won so dearly for us by past generations”, you could be forgiven for thinking that staging public demonstrations in the knowledge that these will bring a predictable (and dangerous) response from anti-fascist, far-left and anti-racist groups as well as muslim organisations (both militant and moderate) is not the best way to go about their campaign of supposedly working towards peaceful change.
Their use of symbols and institutions such as the St George’s flag, various military images and even Christmas (incidentally, a Christian not an English celebration), some of which have been misappropriated and distorted by other groups not unlike their own (especially football hooligans, which the EDL has been linked to), does nothing to support their credentials as a ‘non-fascist’ organisation. And on the English Defence League’s youth website, there seems to be some confusion over whether their job is to defend England (or English?) or the whole of Great Britain from Muslim extremists .
But what I find most unsettling about their ‘mission’ is the central theme of blind conviction to support of the British armed forces, clearly seeing this as everyone’s patriotic duty and suggesting that any questioning of their role abroad (especially if you are a Muslim) is something that shouldn’t be allowed (or should, at best, be discouraged).
The EDL was apparently born in June when soldiers of the Royal Anglian Regiment returned from Iraq and a small but very vocal Muslim group called them ‘butchers’ and ‘child killers’. I was as disgusted as anyone by the language used by these people and would in no way support the way they went about their protest. But, let’s examine the facts. Since Bush and Blair took us into this illegal war in 2003, 130 British servicemen have been killed in Iraq. In the same period, over 46,000 Iraqi civilians have been killed, many by the actions of coalition forces.
So, perhaps it is unfair to call British soldiers murderers and child killers but, if a foreign army had invaded the UK and 46,000 civilians had been killed as a result, I’m sure the EDL would be first in line to condemn this as outrageous, criminal and unacceptable.
I think we are danger now of more and more factional conflict in this country as people gravitate towards single issue groups that appeal to some sort of twisted sense of national identity and patriotism and which offer a potential defence against the myth of Muslim extremists taking over Britain and destroying all that we hold dear.
The politicians (Bush and Blair especially) are to blame for this atmosphere of impending doom and paranoia and it is now up to them – and those of us who understand the danger posed by organisations like the EDL and similar extremist groups of whatever religious or political persuasion – to act decisively to prevent further damage to many of our already fragile communities.

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So we’ll make the news again for the wrong reasons. Will be interesting from a photographic point of view.
Some footage of the ‘not racist’ EDL
http://current.com/items/90919637_far-right-group-return-to-birmingham.htm
Warning; its not pretty
So their website is right then; no trace of right wing, racist thugs and football hooligans in the EDL’s ranks… just concerned patriots trying to make a valid political point.
Just like that nice National Socialist chap in Germany. Now what was his name? I’m sure it began with an ‘A’…