Lord Bracknell
On fire
This is just as silly. I did then go on to explain that I meant indigenous folk. Presumably you saw that but decided to pick on this, very conveniently. Your final sentence is irrelevant - at no time did I, or indeed anyone on this thread, mention anything to the contrary. The point was that with tit for tat atrocities, attitudes can polarise.
I'm afraid that no amount of "explanation" to the effect that "indigenous folk" equates with "christians" and stands in opposition to "muslims" will disguise the inherent racism in this sort of thinking. There are millions of white British people who are not Christians. There are millions of black British people who are Christians. And there are millions of British people who are neither white nor Christian nor Muslim.
Anticipating a future conflict between Muslims and what you call "indigenous folk" seems to me to be inviting people to take sides and is incredibly dangerous if it has the effect of causing British Muslims to see themselves as threatened. The conflict we are seeing is with IS, a fundamentalist, sectarian Sunni organisation functioning in Syria and surrounding countries. IS won't be defeated if western hostility to Islam in general drives more young men into the arms of these evil perpetrators of mass murder.
Shouting "Islam is the threat" from the rooftops has that effect.