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To: Olog-hai

Is Bonfire Night where the Sunnis go light the Shia on fire and vice versa or is it more like a good old American camp fire where you invite your neighbors over for some s’mores?


2 posted on 11/11/2012 7:08:38 PM PST by Sir Clancelot
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To: Sir Clancelot

Maybe you’re confusing that with Devil’s Night when they used to burn down all the houses in Detroit on Halloween.

(I think now they even gave up on doing that.)


3 posted on 11/11/2012 7:11:27 PM PST by nascarnation (Baraq's bankruptcy: 2016)
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To: Sir Clancelot
Is Bonfire Night where the Sunnis go light the Shia on fire and vice versa or is it more like a good old American camp fire where you invite your neighbors over for some s’mores?

Oh, the two ideas somehow blended, and you used to invite your neighbors to make s'mores over the burning corpses of those infidel twits.

Of course, the government now discourages the practice. S'mores may contain dreadful amounts of sugar, fat, and carcinogens, and burning people is not very carbon-neutral.

4 posted on 11/11/2012 7:19:16 PM PST by Lonely Bull
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To: Sir Clancelot
Is Bonfire Night where the Sunnis go light the Shia on fire and vice versa or is it more like a good old American camp fire where you invite your neighbors over for some s’mores?

Remember, remember the fifth of November
Gunpowder, treason and plot
I see no reason
Why gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot

Bonfire Night is held each year in the UK on the Fifth of November - also known as Guy Fawkes Day. It commemorates the events of the Fifth of November 1605 when Guy Fawkes was discovered underneath the Houses of Parliament surrounded by barrels of gunpowder intended to blow up the Parliament when the King came to open it. It was a plot by radical Catholics to destroy the Protestant government of Britain - an averted act of terrorism.

Bonfires were lit across England in celebration that the King's life had been spared, and it became a tradition to repeat this. Once they became available fireworks began to accompany the bonfires. Today, that's basically what you get - it's the traditional night for bonfires and fireworks in the United Kingdom. Sometimes an effigy of Guy Fawkes is burned on the bonfire. It used to be a distinctly anti-Catholic demonstration but that really stopped well over a century ago along with other forms of discrimination against Catholics.

10 posted on 11/12/2012 12:43:12 PM PST by naturalman1975 ("America was under attack. Australia was immediately there to help." - John Winston Howard)
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