... the same kind of WMD they found in Iraq, anyway...
Links:
[1] http://rabble.ca/print/babble/international-news-and-politics/tony-blair-pelted-wmd-dublin-book-signing#comment-1177749
[2] http://rabble.ca/print/babble/international-news-and-politics/tony-blair-pelted-wmd-dublin-book-signing#comment-1177751
[3] http://rabble.ca/print/babble/international-news-and-politics/tony-blair-pelted-wmd-dublin-book-signing#comment-1177810
[4] http://rabble.ca/print/babble/international-news-and-politics/tony-blair-pelted-wmd-dublin-book-signing#comment-1177812
[5] http://rabble.ca/print/babble/international-news-and-politics/tony-blair-pelted-wmd-dublin-book-signing#comment-1178038
[6] http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/tonyblair
[7] http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=150746811621277
[8] http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/iraq
[9] http://rabble.ca/user
[10] http://rabble.ca/user/register
Tony Blair pelted with eggs at book signing in Dublin
Couldn't have happened to a nicer person.
Poor eggs, cracked in the service of mankind ... I hope they didn't suffer.
Maybe that's why they also pelted Axl Rose with stuff-they thought he was late hitting the stage because he was drinking with Tony!
http://www.newsoxy.com/entertainment/guns-n-roses-pelted-dublin-14538.ht...
Looking for Tony Blair's memoir? Try the crime section
But a Facebook page was today inundated with pictures of the former prime minister's book in odd places after thousands joined a group entitled "Subversively move Tony Blair's memoirs [7] to the crime section in bookshops".
The Facebook page – which had more than 5,000 members by mid-afternoon – urges them to "make bookshops think twice about where they categorise our generations [sic] greatest war criminal".
The group was started by nursing student Euan Booth – no relation to Euan Blair, or indeed Cherie Booth – to protest about the book and Blair's record in Iraq [8]. He had thought of staining books with fake blood – but wanted to take action that was non-criminal and peaceful. "It is mischievous, but no one is coming to any harm," he said. "It is a very English way of voicing your opinion and is meant to be a bit of fun."