OldSolduer
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HavokFour said:A ring of armed Royal Marines around the Cenotaph wouldn't be out of the question.
With Para and SAS snipers providing overwatch
HavokFour said:A ring of armed Royal Marines around the Cenotaph wouldn't be out of the question.
Jim Seggie said:With Para and SAS snipers providing overwatch
opp550 said:@ the three above replies
That has to be the absolute stupidest idea ever.
London would explode with that much badassery in one place!
opp550 said:I meant that if the Parachute Regiment, the Royal Marines, and The Special Air Service were in one place their collective toughness in one place, havoc would ensue.
I meant it as a joke, and if anyone takes offense to it, it was not meant as such and I sincerely apologize if anyone feels that way.
opp550 said:......
If I was a business owner in London right now, the law would be the only thing that would protect looters from me
.....
London riots: residents fight back
Shops and homes in an upmarket area of south London were protected from rioters by a human barricade as residents and workers across the capital were forced to defend themselves.
Locals in Clapham Junction, Dalston and Whitechapel took to the streets and faced down the mob on Monday night after realising that police were too over-stretched to help.
In south London, officers were nowhere to be seen as shopfronts were smashed in St John’s Road, Clapham Junction.
But the gangs of youths were prevented from carrying on their rampage south into Northcote Road, site of restaurants - specialist food stores and boutiques - by locals who guarded the top of the street from a branch of Nando’s to the Northcote pub.......
John Comyn, who has lived in the area all his life, said: “Most people I spoke to were local and couldn't believe what was happening. No one wanted to venture down St John's Road but we weren't going to let them ruin our street......
In one of east London’s most fashionable districts, shopkeepers brandishing makeshift weapons took to the streets.
As nearby Hackney was targeted by rioters and looters, the mostly Turkish owners of barber shops and food stores in Dalston pulled the shutters down on their premises and stood guard outside......
Jerry Keshin, who runs Jerry's Food and Wine on Stoke Newington Road, said: “I shut early because I heard they were coming. I went down to Hoxton to get my boys and we drove back up and saw a group of about 10 rioters who were on their way into our area. We chased them into one of the estates and had it out. ....
His friend Aykut Boyraz said: “The community is close and we all know each other. We're not going to have any riots around here. It doesn't matter if you're Turkish, if you live round here we'll defend you......
The Bengali community in Whitechapel, further into East London, fended off a mob of looters.
Rioters who had targeted shops on Commercial Road arrived in the area as prayers were finishing at the East London Mosque on Monday evening.
It was feared they were trying to break into the mosque and the nearby Islamic Bank of Britain, but they were driven away by a large crowd of Muslim worshippers.
“Within about 10 minutes there were 1,500 people on the street, not just Asians but also Somalis,” said Muhammad Ali, 27.
“We were at a chicken shop, finishing our fast when we saw the looters. Some had bandanas over their faces.”
According to Sam Miah, 26, the riot police were unsure what to do. “They saw our brothers from the mosque and we said we could handle the situation.”
Mahbub Alam, 35, the proprietor of a computer shop, said their intervention reflected the determination of the community to protect itself from the mob and make sure its shops and cafes did not suffer the same fate as others across the capital.
“The riots are disgusting, I would never have thought I would have witnessed something like this in a civilised society,” he said.
In this case, at least, the rioters’ timing was poor, because they arrived as a large number of worshippers - many in their 20s and 30s - were spilling out onto the street.
“Some of our boys got into their cars and followed the rioters, who went straight to the Docklands Light Railway and left.
“Our boys acted very maturely and it gave confidence to the whole community, Muslim and non-Muslim, when something happened they were ready for it.".....
Up to 20 youths carrying pieces of wood and even mop handles tried to break into Best Buy on Harlesden High Street but locals said the staff were “not having it”.
daftandbarmy said:Actually, it's all looking rather tame.
Sure, there's a bit of 'hooting and looting', but likely nothing that can't be covered by the usual insurance claims. Luckily, most of the damage seems confined to the looters' home turf as well, which is awkward if - in a couple of months - you try to buy a pint of milk from a shop you trashed previously.
All in all, a pretty amatuer performance by the restless natives, which the police seem to be handling fairly well. A good rehearsal for Olympic security, as well as a good opportunity to launch a significant numbers of preventative arrests, no doubt assisted by the evidence they will be collecting from the thousands of cameras they have deployed in most urban areas these days.
daftandbarmy said:Actually, it's all looking rather tame.
No heaps of bodies, no plastic bullets/ baton rounds deployed, no 'no go' zones established by heavily armed bad guys having to be stormed by armoured vehicles (or paratroopers), no guns/IEDs/other nasties to deal with concurrent with howling mobs. Luxury....
Sure, there's a bit of 'hooting and looting', but likely nothing that can't be covered by the usual insurance claims. Luckily, most of the damage seems confined to the looters' home turf as well, which is awkward if - in a couple of months - you try to buy a pint of milk from a shop you trashed previously.
All in all, a pretty amatuer performance by the restless natives, which the police seem to be handling fairly well. A good rehearsal for Olympic security, as well as a good opportunity to launch a significant numbers of preventative arrests, no doubt assisted by the evidence they will be collecting from the thousands of cameras they have deployed in most urban areas these days.
The biggest challenge the government will face will likely be finding enough cash to pay the overtime for all the Peelers deployed to deal with the Pond Life, as well as the inevitable push from the security services to increase the budgets for 2012. That would be a good reason to send in the military - we're cheaper, and better looking ;D
Jimmy_D said:Are you even paying attention to the media? Look at Chief Stoker's post, also what about what the looters are doing to some of the ppl who are just trying to go on their regular day business. They knocked a guy down, helped him up and stole from him; They were forcing ppl to strip naked in the middle of the streets to take their clothes ( and with the photos i seen I'm pretty sure the guy wouldn't even fit into those clothes), They were stripping down monuments, burning cars, throwing projectiles at police, burning buildings. I still see a great deal of defiance which has to be dealt with wheather it is large numbers or small.
Don't you?
JD
ModlrMike said:England riots: primary school assistant pleads guilty to Croydon burglary
whiners saying it's all poor, downtrodden youth rebelling, and we should really feel sorry for them.
Source: BBC, 10 Aug 11In the wake of the riots in English cities, law-abiding citizens have been picking up brooms and brushes and joining the clean-up. Is the broom the symbol of the resistance to the riots?
After the rioting every night this week, the news headlines told a bleak story of communities under attack. But hours later locals wearing wellies and washing up gloves were reclaiming the streets with brooms, bin bags and dustpans.
The fightback has been co-ordinated by the Twitter campaign #riotcleanup, launched by Dan Thompson and Sophie Collard, two strangers who were united by a shared sense of outrage at the scenes of devastation.
"The most shocking thing was the TV footage of fires spreading across London," says Thompson, an artist in Worthing. "The pictures of the furniture warehouse in Croydon burning was like something out of the Blitz."
Continue reading the main story
The response to the Twitter campaign was dramatic. By the following morning crowds of people had gathered in riot-affected areas like Clapham Junction and Hackney.
When London Mayor Boris Johnson went to inspect the damage in Clapham Junction, the crowd chanted "where's your broom" and one was soon pushed into his hand.
He raised it aloft to cheers that seemed to recognise the new symbol of the fightback ....