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[Albion] Another banning order.....



Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,139
Faversham
One of the most amusing things he does these days is keep writing post after post on whichever thread, in a forlorn attempt to get any sort of acknowledgement from anyone :shrug:

If he gets just one reply to his numerous posts he'll be all over it, like a tramp on chips, justifying his unedifying desperation for attention. Even funnier when there is no reaction whatsoever to any of the numerous posts and the thread slowly sinks :wink:

Droopy? I have a feeling that one or two of the moderators are playing him like Paul Whitehouse with a fat old trout :lolol:
 




Jan 30, 2008
31,981
Not even close. I doubt anything will come close to the popularity of my book 'The bigotry mask of an unloved soul'.

It has stuff in there about people who choose to be in support of things like anti-IsIam and the Nazi's. IT proves how these people who choose the bigotry path are sadly just looking for the attention they never received when they used to go out flower picking and choir singing when younger.

Very good book by my standards and one I'm sure you'd be in much agreement of.

,
as i said sure to be a best seller , people like a bit of controversy wouldn't it be a boring place with out it:wink:
regards
DF
 
Last edited:


Jan 30, 2008
31,981
One of the most amusing things he does these days is keep writing post after post on whichever thread, in a forlorn attempt to get any sort of acknowledgement from anyone :shrug:

If he gets just one reply to his numerous posts he'll be all over it, like a tramp on chips, justifying his unedifying desperation for attention. Even funnier when there is no reaction whatsoever to any of the numerous posts and the thread slowly sinks :wink:
thanks for chipping in though :wave:
regards
DF
 










Beach Seagull

New member
Jan 2, 2010
1,310
Brighton fan gets 8 weeks for racism, it beggars belief, if he had knocked someone out physically at the game I doubt he would've got that long. Make the sentence fit the crime. But it's a big tick in the 'we take racism seriously' box isn't it. NSC chat liberal elite will soon be all over this......
 


Driver8

On the road...
NSC Patron
Jul 31, 2005
16,215
North Wales
Brighton fan gets 8 weeks for racism, it beggars belief, if he had knocked someone out physically at the game I doubt he would've got that long. Make the sentence fit the crime. But it's a big tick in the 'we take racism seriously' box isn't it. NSC chat liberal elite will soon be all over this......

What sentence do you think is appropriate for racism?
 






Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,139
Faversham
What sentence do you think is appropriate for racism?

I'll be surprised if you get any sensible comment out of the gammon echo chamber :shrug:
 


Beach Seagull

New member
Jan 2, 2010
1,310
What sentence do you think is appropriate for racism?

Not 8 weeks in prison. If I knocked someone out tonight (I wouldn't) I wouldn't get 8 weeks. If you get burgled (I never have been ) it must be enormously distressing, you wouldn't even see a policeman, it doesn't 'tick a box' does it, but 'hate crime' does.
 






portlock seagull

Well-known member
Jul 28, 2003
17,778
Each to their own but 36 years into watching this club, the sight of grown adults goading each other with wanker and "come on then" signs never ceases to amaze. The number of fans at West Ham who seemed far more interested in opposition fans than what was happening on the pitch was mind boggling. But that's just me.

It’s a little immature but isn’t that part of what makes football what it is. Colin Sensibles got opera and ra ra rugger. Most are yoof, and so what if there’s some over 21s, 31s, or even 51s doing it. I’m sure you've called the ref a wanker accompanied by hand signals and besides it’s all bollocks, meaningless and forgotten about immediately the FT whistle goes. Personally I just laugh at it but I wouldn’t want to see people getting banned or ejected, lose livelihoods and more because Tarquin’s discovered football and wants the world to conform to his morally superior perspective. Way too many people these days have zero tolerance about just about everything and anything that isn’t their outlook and seek to change things for the so called better. Yet people have never been more miserable and I do wonder where all this pent up anger and frustration that naturally occurs, if you’re still human that is, goes otherwise. Football used to be known as a bit of a release but these days the doormice have moved out of churches and into places like the Amex it would seem. Live and let live I say. Seen more cut throat and come on then gestures at away games than I care to remember. Never once heard about a fan with a sliced jugular afterwards though. It’s all pantomime really.
 








Beach Seagull

New member
Jan 2, 2010
1,310
I’m old fashioned enough to somehow think it’s worse for a man to hit a woman than it is for them to hit another man. No real logic to it - simply the way I feel.

I am as well, to the extent I wouldn't have women coppers / stewards on the front line, they aren't physically capable, but the trendy left give it the 'we are all equal' rubbis but then talk about 'female stewards'
 


Creaky

Well-known member
Mar 26, 2013
3,862
Hookwood - Nr Horley
I am as well, to the extent I wouldn't have women coppers / stewards on the front line, they aren't physically capable, but the trendy left give it the 'we are all equal' rubbis but then talk about 'female stewards'

Possibly but, because many are reluctant to hit a woman, maybe they are in a better position to defuse a situation compared to a burley steward or cop.
 






Sheebo

Well-known member
Jul 13, 2003
29,319
So I don't get what the likes of you and [MENTION=12452]doogie004[/MENTION] want?

You say it's ridiculous, nanny state etc. but then want the away fans sorted out? Make your mind up whether there should be tolerance of the behaviour or not?

Think the biggest difference here is, as with most incidents that go further at football matches, is that when asked to stop by people in authority, whether stewards or police, is whether you choose to accept that instruction and stop. From what I've seen there is a relaxed attitude to fans goading each other generally, but try to cross over a barrier to confront them is going to trigger the stewards to take action - at any ground, happened at West Ham on Saturday. At that point in your enraged state you have a choice, 1. react to the steward in a reasonable way and say 'all right all right but why don't you tell that lot...okay I'm calm now...etc" or 2. tell the steward to **** off and inflame the situation.

That's what it boils down to. The fact is, there was enough stewarding tolerance to allow his behaviour to develop into an attempt to cross the netting in the first place.

I've also seen incidents like this a thousand times, but like Saturday as mentioned, when the West Ham numpty was told to get back to his seat by a steward he went, or at least didn't abuse the steward. And that is what mostly happens to be honest. That this escalated then physically resisted and kicked off when asked to leave, well in my experience of bars, clubs and anything else, you get barred. Always have done.

There’s obviously levels of what tolerated and what not but it was clear that day there were 2 pockets of Villa causing it. Yes the guy prob shouldn’t have reacted as he did (pissed up) but the villa fans were crossing the line. Those Weat Ham knobs did far worse in my opinion and could have caused a riot, but were shown back to their seats which was shocking. can’t really comment too much without witnessing the incidents up close but this seems harsh. A 3 game ban would have done really from what it sounds like. It’s different from a bar etc as it’s a regular way of life. I’ve known loads of people get banned from their locals for a week or whatever for silly behaviour - the Albion is like our local!
 


Beach Seagull

New member
Jan 2, 2010
1,310
Possibly but, because many are reluctant to hit a woman, maybe they are in a better position to defuse a situation compared to a burley steward or cop.

Why would they be 'reluctant' we are all equal now?? Can't have it both ways, can't wave the 'I'm a female so don't hit me' card then claim equality. For the record my upbringing was characterised by appalling domestic violence (male (pfffft) to female) and I would rather switch buy a palace ST than hit a woman.
 


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