YOU CAN'T BELIEVE THE LOGO THEY CHOSE FOR THE LONDON OLYMPICS!
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Posted By: Rayelan
Date: Monday, 4 June 2007, 9:07 p.m.
What kind of subliminal message is it sending? That the UK is fracturing into pieces like shattered glass?
Maybe they are applying this "shattered" motif to the rest of the world also.
Take a look at the piece where LONDON is written. Looks like a great big "Z" to me, doesn't it you? Hmmm... could it stand for Zion London? Have the owners of the City of London... (you know... the same guys that own the Federal Reserve and most all of the banks in the rest of the world... along with mostly everything else that has anything to do with money... like brokerage houses and Wall Street...) Have the owners of the City of London finally announced to the world that they not only OWN London... but they could care less about it!!
I wonder if this logo has anything to do with the stealing of the Queen's gold?
See what the Scotsman newspaper has to say about the logo... (below the image.)
London's £400,000 Olympic logo - an inspiration or a puerile mess?
ALISON HARDIE SENIOR NEWS WRITER (ahardie@scotsman.com)
IT WAS designed to unite and inspire the nation, but yesterday the newly unveiled logo for the 2012 London Olympics was condemned as "naive and old-fashioned" and "a puerile mess".
The Games' organising committee insisted the £400,000 invested in the logo - which comes in lurid shades of pink, blue, green and orange, and is meant to be a graffiti-style play on 2012 - had been money well spent.

Last night, an online petition to demand that the logo be scrapped had received 10,000 signatures.
The petition reads: "We, the undersigned, call on the London Olympic committee to scrap and change the ridiculous logo unveiled for the London 2012 Olympics." Signatories from all over the UK - and also France and the United States - had voiced disapproval of the design.
One wrote: "It's atrocious - hard to read, to understand and it has no significance to London or England whatsoever."
Another said: "This makes us look like a bunch of stupid, untidy idiots."
But Lord Coe was adamant it put across the image he wanted the London Games to deliver to the world. He argued: "It's not a logo - it's a brand that will take us forward for the next five years. It won't be to everybody's taste immediately, but it's a brand that we genuinely believe in."