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Britain
Herod's Harrods bans soldiers on Poppy Day
2006-11-21
For it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' "Chuck him out, the brute!"
But it's "Saviour of 'is country" when the guns begin to shoot;
An' it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' anything you please;
An' Tommy ain't a bloomin' fool -- you bet that Tommy sees!

-Rudyard Kipling

These days, the guns are shooting and it's still "chuck him out, the brute!"

Lest anyone forget, Harrods is owned by Muhammed Al-Fayed, the father of Princess Di's boyfriend, Dodi Al-Fayed. The elder Al-Fayed has repeatedly charged that the couple's fatal motor accident was in fact an assassination arranged by British agents (as though a drunken Frenchman could not possibly have a car crash while playing dodg'em with a horde of paparazzi.)
A serving Army officer was banned from entering Harrods on Remembrance Day in case his uniform upset other shoppers. Lieutenant Daniel Lenherr had just taken part in a parade honouring Britain's war dead when the London department store turned him away at the door. The security guard told him other customers might be intimidated by the uniform.

The 26-year-old soldier, who serves in the 1st regiment of the Royal Horse Artillery, had been at commemorations in Hyde Park Corner last weekend when he decided to visit the shop with his wife Michelle and their one-year-old son. Mrs Lenherr, who lives in Tidworth, Hampshire, said: "We were horrified when we were refused entry on a day when we honoured the men who sacrificed so much for our freedom. I find it sad this can happen."

The store has stood by their dress policy, saying: "There is a long-standing tradition at Harrods that would normally preclude customers who are wearing non-civilian attire from entering the store.
"Longstanding" since Islamic conspiraliars took it over.
"A lot of people assume that somebody in uniform is either there on official duty, which could cause them alarm, or they assume they're a member of staff and ask them where the lavatories are and so on."
I wouldn't doubt that some of Harrods upper management might have good reason to fear the Army, though not the PC police. Note how almost in the same breath the Harrods dhimmi insults the uniform with the facetious suggestion that it resembles that of an usher or doorman.
If true it's a sad admission that most Brits wouldn't recognize the uniform of their country's army. But I suspect that's not the case.
But the shop came under fire for its ban.
Too bad the RHA itself can't bring it under fire during their next field exercises.
Shadow Defence Minister Mark Harper said: "It's an outrageous slap in the face to our Armed Forces who are serving our country around the world. On Remembrance Sunday it's even more of an insult. I cannot see any legitimate reason for a shop not to let in members of the Armed Forces in uniform."

And Thomas Carter MBE, a former Warrant Officer in the Royal Horse Artillery, said Mr Lenherr had been treated disgracefully. The 78-year-old said: "Harrods' policy is a load of rubbish. It treats members of the Armed Forces as sixth-rate citizens. It definitely makes it worse that it was on Remembrance Sunday, as that's the day everybody wears uniform."

Rival department stores Selfridges and Harvey Nichols said they had no problem with service personnel entering their stores in uniform.
Posted by:Glinenter Snans2757

#12  Lol - you're getting pissy, Zenster? Shit, you "borrow" ideas posted before yours frequently enough that this made me lol.
Posted by: .com   2006-11-21 23:36  

#11  Good plan, AH9418. After the uniformed troops are all turned away, the second wave of regulars can implement my plan.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-11-21 22:59  

#10  The British military could send a few thousand of their men (all at once, in uniform, and at the hour of opening) to clog the entrances of Harrod's so that they could be turned away, one by one. It would make a very public point and would hit Harrod's in their pocketbook since apparently the store has no heart.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2006-11-21 20:10  

#9  Wonder how they'd react to a bunch of skinheads with leather jackets and chains 'round their waists??
Posted by: DanNY   2006-11-21 18:23  

#8  Just another day in the day of TRANZI life of England and the U.K.. This is what the BBC and the Labor party have done to the U.K.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom   2006-11-21 17:39  

#7  Hell, this just can't be true. It too crazy.
Posted by: Shipman   2006-11-21 17:30  

#6  No problem with burqas, though. Just don't wear a British uniform or a cross.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2006-11-21 16:57  

#5  I love the way you think Z-man.
Between this and the following story, I really think that Britian has completely lost its way.
Posted by: USN, ret.   2006-11-21 16:48  

#4  Rival department stores Selfridges and Harvey Nichols said they had no problem with service personnel entering their stores in uniform.

End of story. Harrod's should be delisted as a military purveyor.

Personally, I'd love to see a large number of Brit military in civilian togs hit their stores during peak Christmas shopping hours and sideline all of Harrod's staff for untold hours with endless questions and pricing requests without purchasing a damn thing afterwards.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-11-21 15:28  

#3  And then boycott them. Forever.
Posted by: .com   2006-11-21 15:10  

#2  Have the soldiers storm the place. That shit will end right quick.
Posted by: DarthVader   2006-11-21 15:05  

#1  Oops, lost my cookie. This one is mine.
At least we'll know where not to shop next time we are in Londonistan, provided the dhimmis haven't banned "Islamophobic American agitators" by then.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2006-11-21 14:57  

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