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Guy Fawkes Day today: Weirdest Political Holiday Ever?

Remember, remember the Fifth of November,

The Gunpowder Treason and Plot,

I know of no reason

Why Gunpowder Treason

Should ever be forgot.

On Nov. 5th England celebrates the prevention of a massive terrorist attack and arrest of the chief conspirator, Guy Fawkes. Guy Fawkes was a Catholic conservative monarchist, and really only opposed the standing king on racial, tribal, and religious grounds.

In America, Guy Fawkes Day has been associated with anti-British sentiment during and after the revolution, but its also been used by protestants as a rallying point for anti-Catholicism. In the last 40 years, it has been increasingly associated in the popular culture with order in anarchy and general anti-government ideas.

Isn't it just kind of weird to celebrate a holiday about a terrorist plot?

http://www.undergroundpolitics.com/index.php/histo...

5 Answers

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  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    Answer: From this Celtic prospective, anyone that is motivated to "have the sun set" on the British empire is Alright in my book!

    How many generations will it take Ireland to un do the damage caused by the English and their UVF thugs (responsible for over half the deaths of the troubles...But you knew that, Right?)

    His was an attempt to attack a corrupt government symbol and those that used it...Not civilians which was their tactic.

  • 1 decade ago

    It's a big deal here in England. In fact, about a million fireworks are going off right now and there is an orange glow from bonfires here and there in back gardens.

    We were lighting bonfires at about this time of year anyway, and at the time the idea that someone would blow up Parliament on the State Opening day shook very many people. Mix in wishes to burn Guy Fawkes in effigy, a general run of anti-Catholic feeling at the time and a garden full of pruned branches and dead leaves, and you end up with a tradition that captures the popular imagination at just the right time of year for a bonfire party.

  • ?
    Lv 4
    5 years ago

    It potential i'm no longer at paintings as we communicate so i will pass grocery buying with the spouse. We do get to verify fireworks from our abode yet to me it gets slightly previous after 5 minutes. Jehovah's Witnesses do no longer participate interior the party of the execution anniversary of an prolonged lifeless medieval who via the burning of his effigy is considered as a political terrorist. i understand that to maximum folk this is in basic terms an excuse for a bonfire and a nosh up on the fish fry. If we could desire to fish fry warm canines and gentle-weight a hearth we've the different 364 days to determine from. What i'm asserting is that we company to maintain ourselves sparkling from political and worldly impacts. via engaging might we showing or might people who hate us start to accuse showing help against a political activist? we are as Christians retaining ourselves politically independent and contain ourselves in basic terms in religious concerns. If we mandatory to do something this Friday or Saturday it does not could desire to revolve around the guy Fawkes celebrations as we've many social activities we get excitement from jointly 300 and sixty 5 days around.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    First of all, no one is "celebrating" Guy Fawkes Day. It's like Boxing Day or Grandparents Day. It's just another day on the calendar for the most part... I don't have a second of all.

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  • 1 decade ago

    V shall rise again!

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