British Bulldog
The great escape
- Feb 6, 2006
- 10,974
Is it possible that the choice of a minute's silence or applause is offered to the family of the deceased in the case of it being an ex Albion player/employee?
Is it possible that the choice of a minute's silence or applause is offered to the family of the deceased in the case of it being an ex Albion player/employee?
Silence is golden, the applause thing is only done because the 'authorities' are shit scared of some tosser singing/booing/laughing etc.
I can understand the applause but a well observed silence is much more poignant.
Depends on the situation.
The minute's silence allows people to remember someone, reflect on a particular incident (e.g. after Hillsborough, or 9/11) what it means, how we fill etc, what sort of impact, think about how we'd react in a given situation and so on. And is very sombre. Someone not taking part in a minute's silence stands out.
The applause is a celebration. It is a thank you and acknowledgement of achievements. Someone not applauding doesn't stand out so much. (i.e. people in the north stand can clearly hear someone in the away section break a silence, but they can't see a half-hearted applause).
I think the applause is more appropriate for people who's time has come. People who die because of old age, who have lived a long life and contributed. But I think a minute's silence is more appropriate when there is a disaster, or someone is taken before their time.
I know this gets brought up after every time we have one, but what are people's thoughts on the whole minute's applause/minute's silence thing?
Personally, although I can see the thinking behind the minute's applause, the silence is an infinitely better way of paying tribute to someone's life and achievements.
See, football grounds are, by nature, generally quite noisy places. If you take away every bit of that noise for one minute, then surely that's a far more powerful and poignant gesture than just having another minute of noise that just seems to blend into the time periods on either side of it?
sorry mate a minutes applause is a recent phenomenon to cover up the embarassment of idiots shouting out, nothing more. A classic Diana Generation development rather than face facts that some people are c unts.
Perhaps you should write to the Royal British Legion to suggest that next remembrance day it should be an applause instead. I wonder what they reckon?