Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jesse James
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
I think the writer is the hypocrite. Look at the ways the two stories are interperated. When the American schoolkids wore their flag inspired clothes on Cinda di Mayo day they are just happy go lucky, proudly patriotic, troop supporting, good clean American kids, the kind of loveable youths that help grandma across the road and do odd jobs to help their community.
But when Khan's team wear their Pakistani colours they are making an intimidating, terrorist supporting, American hating battle cry.
I hate the way the media interperate things for their own ends.
Look at the Wooten Basset march.
When us Brits mourned the deaths of British soldiers in Wooten Basset,it was all about respect for those brave men, solidarity with their familys and a show of unity against war and aggression.
But when the Muslims wanted to march through the same town to mourn the deaths (many times more as well) of their Arab bretheren killed in Afgansistan and Iraq they were ' evil' ,'fundamentalist', 'radical ', 'hate driven' so much so that a new law was rushed through to prevent them exercising their freedom of speech and incidently was supported by virtually the whole country.
The media and public bias in terms of interperating the behaviours of both sides is frankly staggering imo.
Apples and oranges dude. First off, those American kids were in their own country.
They didn't go to Pakistan or some other country and try to rile things up. I don't think DiBella or anybody else gave a damn what Khans people were wearing, they had a problem with them all bum-rushing the stage like a bunch of thugs. And the writer was simply pointing out that the citizens of NY are on edge right now, and the wrong person might not be too keen on seeing some Pakistani militant clothing and the some Muslims acting like thugs.
You're right, it's been great how no Americans have gone over to Muslim countries, particularly South Asia and riled up any kind of ill feeling in those places. They've really demonstrated such resolve in staying out of the business of the Islamic world and... wait... I'll get my coat :-\
Also, I'm curious on your take on Pakistani militant clothing, are their insurgents decked out in black hoodies??
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jesse James
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
I think the writer is the hypocrite. Look at the ways the two stories are interperated. When the American schoolkids wore their flag inspired clothes on Cinda di Mayo day they are just happy go lucky, proudly patriotic, troop supporting, good clean American kids, the kind of loveable youths that help grandma across the road and do odd jobs to help their community.
But when Khan's team wear their Pakistani colours they are making an intimidating, terrorist supporting, American hating battle cry.
I hate the way the media interperate things for their own ends.
Look at the Wooten Basset march.
When us Brits mourned the deaths of British soldiers in Wooten Basset,it was all about respect for those brave men, solidarity with their familys and a show of unity against war and aggression.
But when the Muslims wanted to march through the same town to mourn the deaths (many times more as well) of their Arab bretheren killed in Afgansistan and Iraq they were ' evil' ,'fundamentalist', 'radical ', 'hate driven' so much so that a new law was rushed through to prevent them exercising their freedom of speech and incidently was supported by virtually the whole country.
The media and public bias in terms of interperating the behaviours of both sides is frankly staggering imo.
Apples and oranges dude. First off, those American kids were in their own country.
They didn't go to Pakistan or some other country and try to rile things up. I don't think DiBella or anybody else gave a damn what Khans people were wearing, they had a problem with them all bum-rushing the stage like a bunch of thugs. And the writer was simply pointing out that the citizens of NY are on edge right now, and the wrong person might not be too keen on seeing some Pakistani militant clothing and the some Muslims acting like thugs.
You're right, it's been great how no Americans have gone over to Muslim countries, particularly South Asia and riled up any kind of ill feeling in those places. They've really demonstrated such resolve in staying out of the business of the Islamic world and... wait... I'll get my coat :-\
Also, I'm curious on your take on Pakistani militant clothing, are their insurgents decked out in black hoodies??
1. It doesn't matter what my take on the clothing is. I was just clarifying what the writer was saying because several people seemed to be confused. The writer wasn't encouraging any hostility towards "Khan's Army," he was simply saying it's not the smartest idea to go strolling through NY right now like that.
2. We ain't talking about militaries or governments, just individuals here. If an American boxer went over to Karachi with a bunch of thugs sporting American flags and acting all crazy, I would expect they wouldn't be greeted warmly.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
They behaved that way because they're Brits. Brits cannot go abroad without making complete pricks of themselves. The Hatton fans at the Hatton/Pacquiao weigh-in had their share of thugs who hurled racial abuse at Pac & Khan, as well as randomly abusing Shane Mosley. It's not a racial or religious thing, it's a national thing. 70% of Brits should be banned from having a passport that allows them to leave the country.
Also Khan shouldn't get the blame for his fans any more than Hatton, Pacquiao or Mayweather should for how their fans behave. It was clear the people who were actually with Khan were not encouraging it.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
They behaved that way because they're Brits. Brits cannot go abroad without making complete pricks of themselves. The Hatton fans at the Hatton/Pacquiao weigh-in had their share of thugs who hurled racial abuse at Pac & Khan, as well as randomly abusing Shane Mosley. It's not a racial or religious thing, it's a national thing. 70% of Brits should be banned from having a passport that allows them to leave the country.
Also Khan shouldn't get the blame for his fans any more than Hatton, Pacquiao or Mayweather should for how their fans behave. It was clear the people who were actually with Khan were not encouraging it.
Haha! OK, that's actually pretty funny.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jesse James
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jesse James
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
I think the writer is the hypocrite. Look at the ways the two stories are interperated. When the American schoolkids wore their flag inspired clothes on Cinda di Mayo day they are just happy go lucky, proudly patriotic, troop supporting, good clean American kids, the kind of loveable youths that help grandma across the road and do odd jobs to help their community.
But when Khan's team wear their Pakistani colours they are making an intimidating, terrorist supporting, American hating battle cry.
I hate the way the media interperate things for their own ends.
Look at the Wooten Basset march.
When us Brits mourned the deaths of British soldiers in Wooten Basset,it was all about respect for those brave men, solidarity with their familys and a show of unity against war and aggression.
But when the Muslims wanted to march through the same town to mourn the deaths (many times more as well) of their Arab bretheren killed in Afgansistan and Iraq they were ' evil' ,'fundamentalist', 'radical ', 'hate driven' so much so that a new law was rushed through to prevent them exercising their freedom of speech and incidently was supported by virtually the whole country.
The media and public bias in terms of interperating the behaviours of both sides is frankly staggering imo.
Apples and oranges dude. First off, those American kids were in their own country.
They didn't go to Pakistan or some other country and try to rile things up. I don't think DiBella or anybody else gave a damn what Khans people were wearing, they had a problem with them all bum-rushing the stage like a bunch of thugs. And the writer was simply pointing out that the citizens of NY are on edge right now, and the wrong person might not be too keen on seeing some Pakistani militant clothing and the some Muslims acting like thugs.
You're right, it's been great how no Americans have gone over to Muslim countries, particularly South Asia and riled up any kind of ill feeling in those places. They've really demonstrated such resolve in staying out of the business of the Islamic world and... wait... I'll get my coat :-\
Also, I'm curious on your take on Pakistani militant clothing, are their insurgents decked out in black hoodies??
1. It doesn't matter what my take on the clothing is. I was just clarifying what the writer was saying because several people seemed to be confused. The writer wasn't encouraging any hostility towards "Khan's Army," he was simply saying it's not the smartest idea to go strolling through NY right now like that.
2. We ain't talking about militaries or governments, just individuals here. If an American boxer went over to Karachi with a bunch of thugs sporting American flags and acting all crazy, I would expect they wouldn't be greeted warmly.
Ok I think it get it. Occupation by American troops, planes and shock and awe are acceptable as they are matters of politics. Individuals from these conquered nations wearing clothing adorned with the colours of their national flag on American soil is a sinister and aggressive act however. Yup that makes sense.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
At the end of the day a simple stare down shouldn't have turned violent like that. I've just watched the video and that kind of behaviour is bang out of order. See, I've nothing against flags, but I do have a big problem with people turning to violence like that. Khan is the one surrounding himself with lots of out of control people, so I think he should be partially responsible for what happened on that stage.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miles
At the end of the day a simple stare down shouldn't have turned violent like that. I've just watched the video and that kind of behaviour is bang out of order. See, I've nothing against flags, but I do have a big problem with people turning to violence like that. Khan is the one surrounding himself with lots of out of control people, so I think he should be partially responsible for what happened on that stage.
What about the throat slitting gestures by Paulie? Acceptable theatre?
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miles
At the end of the day a simple stare down shouldn't have turned violent like that. I've just watched the video and that kind of behaviour is bang out of order. See, I've nothing against flags, but I do have a big problem with people turning to violence like that. Khan is the one surrounding himself with lots of out of control people, so I think he should be partially responsible for what happened on that stage.
What about the throat slitting gestures by Paulie? Acceptable theatre?
A few words and gestures is the norm, isn't it?
But a bunch of outsiders jumping in and pandemonium breaking out? That's surely not part of the script. Don't get me wrong, Khan didn't do all that himself, but who were all those guys and what on earth were they trying to do? Not cool.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
miles
At the end of the day a simple stare down shouldn't have turned violent like that. I've just watched the video and that kind of behaviour is bang out of order. See, I've nothing against flags, but I do have a big problem with people turning to violence like that. Khan is the one surrounding himself with lots of out of control people, so I think he should be partially responsible for what happened on that stage.
What about the throat slitting gestures by Paulie? Acceptable theatre?
Malignaggi always does the slitting gestures, even when his name is announced before a fight. But he wasn't the one doing the pushing and shoving.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
littlebif
Iam hopping Paulie stops Khan or even just beats him, would make my weekend very happy 1.
I hope Khan beats the living crap out of the metrosexual Paulie.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
I think the writer is the hypocrite. Look at the ways the two stories are interperated. When the American schoolkids wore their flag inspired clothes on Cinda di Mayo day they are just happy go lucky, proudly patriotic, troop supporting, good clean American kids, the kind of loveable youths that help grandma across the road and do odd jobs to help their community.
But when Khan's team wear their Pakistani colours they are making an intimidating, terrorist supporting, American hating battle cry.
I hate the way the media interperate things for their own ends.
Look at the Wooten Basset march.
When us Brits mourned the deaths of British soldiers in Wooten Basset,it was all about respect for those brave men, solidarity with their familys and a show of unity against war and aggression.
But when the Muslims wanted to march through the same town to mourn the deaths (many times more as well) of their Arab bretheren killed in Afgansistan and Iraq they were ' evil' ,'fundamentalist', 'radical ', 'hate driven' so much so that a new law was rushed through to prevent them exercising their freedom of speech and incidently was supported by virtually the whole country.
The media and public bias in terms of interperating the behaviours of both sides is frankly staggering imo.
I highly doubt this boxing writer, who is British, wrote the Cinco de Mayo/Amercian flag piece. His advice was very similar to the actions that teacher took - that at this current time subtlety is probably best ;)
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
I think the writer is the hypocrite. Look at the ways the two stories are interperated. When the American schoolkids wore their flag inspired clothes on Cinda di Mayo day they are just happy go lucky, proudly patriotic, troop supporting, good clean American kids, the kind of loveable youths that help grandma across the road and do odd jobs to help their community.
But when Khan's team wear their Pakistani colours they are making an intimidating, terrorist supporting, American hating battle cry.
I hate the way the media interperate things for their own ends.
Look at the Wooten Basset march.
When us Brits mourned the deaths of British soldiers in Wooten Basset,it was all about respect for those brave men, solidarity with their familys and a show of unity against war and aggression.
But when the Muslims wanted to march through the same town to mourn the deaths (many times more as well) of their Arab bretheren killed in Afgansistan and Iraq they were ' evil' ,'fundamentalist', 'radical ', 'hate driven' so much so that a new law was rushed through to prevent them exercising their freedom of speech and incidently was supported by virtually the whole country.
The media and public bias in terms of interperating the behaviours of both sides is frankly staggering imo.
I highly doubt this boxing writer, who is British, wrote the Cinco de Mayo/Amercian flag piece. His advice was very similar to the actions that teacher took - that at this current time subtlety is probably best ;)
Yes I get what you're saying. I didn't mean this particular writer is necessarily a hypocrite, I mean the media in general. Whenever America or British people are involved, it's always associated with words like 'brave', 'proud', 'heroic' etc but when it's an ethnic minority it becomes 'radical', 'fundamentalist' 'hate'.
I find it annoying.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
khans fans were the problem not actually khan
Why is it with muslims every single event turns into one big chant for the almighty allah. They did it yesterday and claimed mohammed had put pakistan into the final of the cricket only for the aussies to eventually go through
I hope khan wins tonight for britain, not for these narrow minded morons who had a few too many energy drinks
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jesse James
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JazMerkin
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Jesse James
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
I think the writer is the hypocrite. Look at the ways the two stories are interperated. When the American schoolkids wore their flag inspired clothes on Cinda di Mayo day they are just happy go lucky, proudly patriotic, troop supporting, good clean American kids, the kind of loveable youths that help grandma across the road and do odd jobs to help their community.
But when Khan's team wear their Pakistani colours they are making an intimidating, terrorist supporting, American hating battle cry.
I hate the way the media interperate things for their own ends.
Look at the Wooten Basset march.
When us Brits mourned the deaths of British soldiers in Wooten Basset,it was all about respect for those brave men, solidarity with their familys and a show of unity against war and aggression.
But when the Muslims wanted to march through the same town to mourn the deaths (many times more as well) of their Arab bretheren killed in Afgansistan and Iraq they were ' evil' ,'fundamentalist', 'radical ', 'hate driven' so much so that a new law was rushed through to prevent them exercising their freedom of speech and incidently was supported by virtually the whole country.
The media and public bias in terms of interperating the behaviours of both sides is frankly staggering imo.
Apples and oranges dude. First off, those American kids were in their own country.
They didn't go to Pakistan or some other country and try to rile things up. I don't think DiBella or anybody else gave a damn what Khans people were wearing, they had a problem with them all bum-rushing the stage like a bunch of thugs. And the writer was simply pointing out that the citizens of NY are on edge right now, and the wrong person might not be too keen on seeing some Pakistani militant clothing and the some Muslims acting like thugs.
You're right, it's been great how no Americans have gone over to Muslim countries, particularly South Asia and riled up any kind of ill feeling in those places. They've really demonstrated such resolve in staying out of the business of the Islamic world and... wait... I'll get my coat :-\
Also, I'm curious on your take on Pakistani militant clothing, are their insurgents decked out in black hoodies??
1. It doesn't matter what my take on the clothing is. I was just clarifying what the writer was saying because several people seemed to be confused. The writer wasn't encouraging any hostility towards "Khan's Army," he was simply saying it's not the smartest idea to go strolling through NY right now like that.
2. We ain't talking about militaries or governments, just individuals here. If an American boxer went over to Karachi with a bunch of thugs sporting American flags and acting all crazy, I would expect they wouldn't be greeted warmly.
Ok I think it get it. Occupation by American troops, planes and shock and awe are acceptable as they are matters of politics. Individuals from these conquered nations wearing clothing adorned with the colours of their national flag on American soil is a sinister and aggressive act however. Yup that makes sense.
I didn't realize that either England or Pakistan were "conquered" nations. Surely not the equal status to the goold old USA, but conquered? ;D But again, I don't see what troops, shock and awe, etc have to do with this. That's a completely seperate issue thta I may or may not agree with you on. But again again, I don't think there's anything sinister about "khans army" but some random pissed off New Yorker might...that's all he was saying.
Re: Khan v Malignaggi weigh in kicks off!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Fenster
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bilbo
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Quote:
Originally Posted by
markb018
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ono
Good read is that. Sounds like madness. Not sure where the reporter is going towards the end of it though.
I think what he was getting at, with a group of guys looking thuggish sporting Pakistan flags and other militant stuff whatever that means. People could jump to conclusions in a city and jump them or something. People are a bit on edge in NYC right now
I just don't think he needed to go there. It was irrelevant to the weigh-in. Plus the Americans should be ok with the Khan army clothing.
Afterall, it is just that - clothing. If it troubles them, it makes the Cinco de Mayo/Us Flag t-shirt outrage a little hypocritical. :p
haha it is funny how when the other side does it, the dreaded minorities, all of a sudden national flags take on a sinister and intimidating character. Poor America was in fear it seems, terrorised by these evil men wearing their milataristic, hate inspired tshirts. Di bella nearly pulls out his fighter over the threat.
I think they needed that school principle there. He wouldn't have let Khan's army into the building dressed in that garb and they would have not been there to kick off :-)
Haha my sentiments exactly mate.
That makes you a hypocrite as well, no? Wasn't the writer thinking along the same lines as the teacher?
What the writer was sending Khan's Army home from school so nothing kicked off? If this isn't the case, i'm not entirely sure what you're point is.
The teacher sent the kids home, not as punishment, but to prevent a potentially bad situation at his school. The writer is relating a British - Pakistani fighter and his entourage to fundamental terrorism...if i'm not mistaken.
Edit: It's clicked. I get you. I know what you're saying though. The teacher had to send the boys home. The writer didn't have to write about Khan and his entourage potentially being mistaken for terrorists.
Double Edit: What the Americans did was a deliberate attempt at causing trouble/sending out a hostile message. Khan's army, whilst laughable, isn't.