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Protest during 2 minutes silence

(48 Posts)
Truffle43 Mon 11-Nov-24 20:49:52

Am I the only one that feels people need to be more respectful to when and where to protest. This woman that protested about Gaza during the 2 minutes silence at Reading should be ashamed of herself. The men being remembered did so to give her the free life she lives today. I do not disagree with her protesting but she chose the wrong place and time and it has upset and angered me. Do others feel differently?

Oreo Mon 11-Nov-24 21:18:08

Was she a teenager? That would be the only excuse in my book.

Chocolatelovinggran Mon 11-Nov-24 21:18:32

Agree Truffle - not the place or time.

rafichagran Mon 11-Nov-24 21:30:00

Agree not the place or time.

Anniebach Mon 11-Nov-24 21:34:29

Agree

Rosie51 Mon 11-Nov-24 21:48:13

What a vile, disrespectful and intentionally nasty thing to do. She knows it won't make a bit of difference to what's happening in Gaza, but wanted to cause upset to the people marking the remembrance, which she clearly did to the woman seen crying.
There's a time and a place for protest, this wasn't it.

Allira Mon 11-Nov-24 22:11:37

There's a time and a place for protest, this wasn't it

Agreed.

Grannybags Mon 11-Nov-24 22:13:23

Allira

^There's a time and a place for protest, this wasn't it^

Agreed.

Hear hear

ftm420 Mon 11-Nov-24 23:00:29

Stupid woman, but why did our local BBC News keep giving her airtime? Including the words "some people agreed with her; others boo'd". I don't think a single person there agreed with her.

Then the article ended with "people dispersed peacefully" (I think). Did they really? Of course they did!

Rubbish reporting.

madalene Mon 11-Nov-24 23:46:23

I think we’re all in agreement. She was disrespectful in the extreme.

Whiff Tue 12-Nov-24 05:28:50

It was disrespectful to all men and women who gave their lives not just in WW1 but any conflict since. Plus all those who are still suffering from their service to this country.

Greenfinch Tue 12-Nov-24 06:13:53

Agreed ftm420.I was saddened that this happened in my local area. Where was the evidence that some agreed with her? All I could hear was booing.

mum2three Tue 12-Nov-24 06:26:29

I think these people are testing to see just how much they can get away with. It just shows.....give someone an inch and they'll take a mile.
If she is here illegally, she should be deported.

love0c Tue 12-Nov-24 08:31:20

ftm For anyone wishing to see the full picture, do not watch the BBC. They will show anything but!! I agree with you totally. I am stunned that some people still view the BBC as giving the truth!

Freya5 Tue 12-Nov-24 08:38:36

ftm420

Stupid woman, but why did our local BBC News keep giving her airtime? Including the words "some people agreed with her; others boo'd". I don't think a single person there agreed with her.

Then the article ended with "people dispersed peacefully" (I think). Did they really? Of course they did!

Rubbish reporting.

I wouldn't expect anything else from that dire news outlet. Disgusting giving this woman even any airtime.

GrannyGravy13 Tue 12-Nov-24 09:17:11

I respect the right to protest however, this was not the time nor the place.

TheWeirdo Tue 12-Nov-24 09:26:59

I hope all the men women and animals who died so we can live come back and HAUNT that repulsive creature.

How utterly selfish, thoughtless, conceited, irresponsible and egotistical. If she's working and if I was her boss I'd sack her on the spot.

Vile.

RosiesMaw2 Tue 12-Nov-24 09:33:12

Not only did the BBC give her airtime, she now gets “GN time”.
Frankly I knew nothing about her protest until this thread. Localised, it should have stayed there.

madalene Tue 12-Nov-24 11:05:57

But unless she happens to be a Gransnetter, the protester won’t know anything about the discussion on here. Mind you, looking at her, she could possibly be a Gransnetter. I doubt it though.

Wyllow3 Tue 12-Nov-24 11:26:26

This was the actual report on the BBC local news includes video. People were uniformly against her. Why knock the BBC for this report buried quite deep in its "local news" section given it was in the Daily Express as well.

When it's giving a slice of news. And relevant.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cm27e6l587do

I agree of course, wrong place, wrong time.

Dickens Tue 12-Nov-24 11:36:23

Freya5

ftm420

Stupid woman, but why did our local BBC News keep giving her airtime? Including the words "some people agreed with her; others boo'd". I don't think a single person there agreed with her.

Then the article ended with "people dispersed peacefully" (I think). Did they really? Of course they did!

Rubbish reporting.

I wouldn't expect anything else from that dire news outlet. Disgusting giving this woman even any airtime.

It was also reported in the Daily Express.

News outlets will report on matters they think will grab people's interest, regardless, and that applies to both the BBC and Express, and any other media.

Franbern Wed 13-Nov-24 08:41:48

I did not see this news item. However, I can very much understand any young person who finds the whole charade of the two minutes silence (in memory of those that died), very farcical.

I am in my eighties, think that in all those years there has been ONE DAY during which there has not been a war somewhere in our world.

True commemoration for soldiers of past conflicts would be the genuine intent of stopping present and future wars.

So, whilst people stand for this two minutes silence, our country is supplying arms to support to current wars - one of which is genocidal.

I am so in admiration of these young people who have genuine peaceful convictions, and not afraid to stand up for them.

Greenfinch Wed 13-Nov-24 10:34:42

I don’t find the two minutes silence farcical. I use it in the presence of others to remember my own grandfather( and his brother) who was killed inWW1 at the Battle of the Somme leaving a wife and two small children with another on the way. I think of my great grandmother losing two sons within three months of each other and another taken as a POW. Yes of course I can think of them at any time but there is something special about doing it alongside others. However, I do take your point Franbern and to a certain extent I agree but this protest in my local town was totally out of place and disrespectful.

Allira Wed 13-Nov-24 10:39:30

I don't find it farcical either.
Nor do I find the prayers for peace farcical either.

People die because of the actions and decisions of politicians, certainly, but do we want madmen to run amok in the world without giving people the means and right to defend themselves?

It doesn't mean we do not think about those who died and pray and hope for a peaceful future.

The cynical in me realises it is not going to happen as long as these megolomaniacs keep appearing.

Aber57 Wed 13-Nov-24 11:20:30

Disgusting behavior. This coming from someone who has just discovered that my uncle (20 years old) was burnt to death when his plane was shot down over France during WW2. Who do these people think they are? Respect all those who have died and are still suffering the horrors of all wars.