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How racist were albion fans in the 70's







BHAZiggy

Pedant
Jan 12, 2011
520
Hastings
It just reads like something you really wished you had the bollocks to do, but didnt.
My big mouth got me into trouble more than once as a teenager, including thrown out of the North Stand twice.
 


BHAZiggy

Pedant
Jan 12, 2011
520
Hastings
The NF had a stall every game outside the Northwest corner.The SWP had theirs about 50 yards away
Are you sure? I didn't think that Shaun Wright-Phillips had been born then.
 


Jan 30, 2008
31,981
They generally work longer hours and harder than us 'locals' so good luck to them. Must admit tho, when I watched a BBC news programme this morning coming from a school about the latest computers for teaching, virtually every pupil was from Indian/Pakistan/African communities. Living in Sussex I still find this a bit of a shock. Perhaps its my age (56). Before anyone slags me off I would point out my eldest son is married to a lovely Chinese girl and I am a proud Grand dad to their son.:thumbsup:
i thought we had got away from these long working hours unless you signed out of that EU directive that said employers couldn't make you work more than 47 hours over a 12 week period . bad culture we've got rushing around at 100 miles an hour let the stupid ones do it i say :smokin:
 


Jan 30, 2008
31,981
Brighton was far from the worst place though, I went to watch Blackburn play Villa in the 90's with some mates, and Villa had Ian Taylor, Dalian Atkinson, Earl Barrett, Mark Walters, Gary Charles, Paul McGrath and Savo Milosevic.

I was in the Blackburn end and one of their HILARIOUS redneck fans shouted as Villa were passing it about "Ni**er to Ni**er to Ni**er to Ni**er to Commie", and his equally intellectually challenged pasty red faced overweight chums thought this the funniest thing they had ever heard by the way they guffawed.

Compared to the former mill towns of the north, Brighton is a far more tolerant place.
Blackburn town centre full of mosques now most of the white locals now live outside of the town centre, don't tell me that isn't true because my mate's from there ,went back there a few years ago and the mosques were emptying out and he said he felt like a foreigner in his own town ?
 




SIMMO SAYS

Well-known member
Jul 31, 2012
11,749
Incommunicado
i thought we had got away from these long working hours unless you signed out of that EU directive that said employers couldn't make you work more than 47 hours over a 12 week period . bad culture we've got rushing around at 100 miles an hour let the stupid ones do it i say :smokin:

'Das' my eldest daughter worked in hospitality at the Amex last season serving in Directors and giving the players their pre-match meals(I was made up!). They started off looking after the staff well. By the end of the season she was fecked over by her bosses who employed out of house (polish) staff. They soon got the boot but she had had her card marked and was never asked to work on a more permanent basis. Not sure if this was what you were going on about?
 


Jan 30, 2008
31,981
'Das' my eldest daughter worked in hospitality at the Amex last season serving in Directors and giving the players their pre-match meals(I was made up!). They started off looking after the staff well. By the end of the season she was fecked over by her bosses who employed out of house (polish) staff. They soon got the boot but she had had her card marked and was never asked to work on a more permanent basis. Not sure if this was what you were going on about?
no SIMMO ,aimed at full time staff , had the choice of opting out of working long hours without being targeted by the company , came in maybe 25 years ago if i remember rightly ,some EU countries were working 37 hours then with some looking to reduce to 35 hours
 


BHAZiggy

Pedant
Jan 12, 2011
520
Hastings
What have mosques in Blackburn got to do with race? Islam is a religion and accepts members of any race. There are churches all over too. Christianity came from the same area as Islam.
 
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life on mars 73

New member
Oct 19, 2010
264
Was the NF girl called Caroline (maybe Carolyn ?) by any chance ? There was a pretty blonde girl who went to my school in Worthing in the 70's, recall seeing her in an NF party political broadcast a few years later.

Wonder what became of her ?
 




Nice story Major, but like most of what goes on in your head, based on fantasy.

Palace were relegated from Division One on the 5th April 1981 after results involving other teams went against them. Their previous game was a 1-0 defeat away to Man Utd on the 4th April.

The 3-0 defeat to the Weed was two games later.

Source Smailes, Gordon (2000). The Breedon Book of Football Records. Derby: Breedon Books. pp. 146.

HTH :wave:

I'm the Martin Peters of the NSC - ahead of my time.
 




Freddie Goodwin.

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2007
7,186
Brighton
Not read all the thread but times have changed and many things and words that are unacceptable now were commonplace back then.

We cannot re-write history but should learn from it.
 










Gullys Cats

Sausage by the sea!!!
Nov 27, 2010
3,112
NSC
I am genuinely shocked, I thought all Brighton fans were yogurt eating flower people!
 


Charlies Shinpad

New member
Jul 5, 2003
4,415
Oakford in Devon
Was the NF girl called Caroline (maybe Carolyn ?) by any chance ? There was a pretty blonde girl who went to my school in Worthing in the 70's, recall seeing her in an NF party political broadcast a few years later.

Wonder what became of her ?

That's the girl, I know her surname but don't put it on here
And she was a stunner who lived out Findon way
 


life on mars 73

New member
Oct 19, 2010
264
Yes, I often wondered how she got involved at such a high level with the NF, I never knew her well at aschool, but recall she was a funny, very pretty girl. Strange.

Back to the main thrust of the thread, times are indeed very different now. How many times, back in the late 60's and 70's, did you hear people talking approvingly about Enoch Powell ? Remember the dockers' march through East London in support of EP?

Just can't imagine that happening now, can you ?
 




Muzzy

Well-known member
Jan 25, 2011
4,787
Lewes
In the late 70s and early '80s there was a very active anti-racist movement, of which 2-Tone was a big part, that stood up to NF and racist skinhead culture. Not all skinheads were racist, 2-Tone and reggae had a fair few skinhead followers - still does, when I saw The Beat in Brighton in 2011 there were plenty of skins there skanking away.

I started going in the North Stand around 1980 (chicken runner before that) and although you did hear racist comments I don't recall there being a general culture of racism. I remember Justin Fashanu getting a very hard time, but that was because he broke Andy Rollings' nose - that he was black was secondary. Other visiting fans were generally worse, Millwall and West Ham, Birmingham and Leeds especially. I am not being an apologist - I was part of the anti-racism movement - just trying to tell it as I remember it.

Black people were very rare in Brighton. It was a very different place -much more insular and 'small-town' than it is now. We had one lad in our year at Patcham Fawcett and he got terrible abuse and bullying. I remember giving 'evidence' on his behalf when he stood up to a bully and there was a bad fight.

Things have thankfully moved on for the better, but zero tolerance is the right approach.

PG

Was that a guy by the name of Manny or something similar? A very good young footballer.
 


User removed 4

New member
May 9, 2008
13,331
Haywards Heath
Brighton was far from the worst place though, I went to watch Blackburn play Villa in the 90's with some mates, and Villa had Ian Taylor, Dalian Atkinson, Earl Barrett, Mark Walters, Gary Charles, Paul McGrath and Savo Milosevic.

I was in the Blackburn end and one of their HILARIOUS redneck fans shouted as Villa were passing it about "Ni**er to Ni**er to Ni**er to Ni**er to Commie", and his equally intellectually challenged pasty red faced overweight chums thought this the funniest thing they had ever heard by the way they guffawed.

Compared to the former mill towns of the north, Brighton is a far more tolerant place.
Considering the general social and economic conditions in Brighton, it's very easy to be.
 


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