C'est le whole point, mon brave.Your own contributions to this thread clearly reflect the level of seriousness to which you treat the issue.
C'est le whole point, mon brave.Your own contributions to this thread clearly reflect the level of seriousness to which you treat the issue.
Well I've voted for 'More female prominent pre-match music' just in the hope that @crodonilson or anyone for that matter can tell me what 'female prominent' music is to be honest.
Are we saying......
This...
Could adjust the Adele song to a chant for a player we don't want to leave tbh!
The issue being that some women have said they feel unsafe at football matches, some have experienced sexism, unwanted physical attention and sexist chanting. I honestly don’t understand why anyone would think that was funny or it can be cancelled out by turning the issue into a source of amusement- unless they felt that they have behaved that way themselves and it’s somehow ok.C'est le whole point, mon brave.
The main issue in this is 'what on earth were you doing at a Palace v Barnsley match?!'If you see idiots behaving like idiots, then call them out, or let a steward know. I have felt unsafe at games, especially one game at Selhurst, when Barnsey equalised near the end of the game. I was sitting near the front because I can't stand for a whole game now, alongside another pensioner, and stupid fools came running forward, kicking and breaking seats, and piling on top of us. Fortunately @Biscuit saw me and came to help me.
Don't give me any old rubbish about grassing people up. Look after your own fans including the women.
Crodo, get another hobby, you are starting to sink lower and lower.
Or is it this?
Read it again.The main issue in this is 'what on earth were you doing at a Palace v Barnsley match?!'
No, it’s a campaign to encourage men to be real men. Don’t worry your little head about it.not really a thing is it. Unless its a new campaign to stop men being men.
Oops!!Read it again.
Behind the food and drink counters ?Definitely women only zones, corral them all together safety in numbers.................but where?
Great post. Crodo wanted a thread taking the piss out of the idea of women’s safety at football matches. A few neanderthal misogynists have jumped in to play their part while other posters have used this thread to criticize his sexist thread starting in general as well as broader issues of the treatment of women. Of course it is a trolling thread but it also probably hasn’t gone the way he wanted as he does seem to be from another era.I’m not in any net thanks - Crodo‘s motives for starting the thread are a little beyond me but irrelevant- the poll is ridiculous even as an attempt at humour and so I stated.
However - Crodo inadvertently raised an important issue - that if some women are feeling unsafe in a football match environment (for whatever reason) or have experienced verbal abuse, sex discrimination or misogynistic behaviour of any sort, it’s a conversation that needs to be had - and, given this is a forum predominantly for football fans, then here is as good a place as any to have a conversation about that.
Your own contributions to this thread clearly reflect the level of seriousness to which you treat the issue.
Edit - just to repeat the point of my first post
2. The only thing that needs to be done to make women safer (and/or feel safer) is for the majority … to call out the minority if they see women being verbally abused or physically threatened. Same way as the majority should also be calling out racist behaviour and homophobia.
…and I’ll add to that, online bulling and trolling
There‘s obviously comfort in their restraining orders and pepper spray.I know plenty of women who go to football and they've never told me they feel unsafe.
I firmly believe that anyone who doesn't find the 1 in 4 statistic plausible may wish to consider why none of the women they know have ever felt comfortable enough to talk of such things.Yup, it does. The "1 in 4" usually quoted number is based on one flawed survey afaik. But regardless most murders and other severe attacks against women doesn't happen the way it is often portrayed in movies etc. Statistically speaking the unsafest place for a woman is to be home with her boyfriend/husband. Yet many fear to go out and do stuff or take a walk after dark, which is a result of blowing up the risks while failing to mention that 99.99% who takes a walk in a park or go to some event will come home unscathered.
Ok, you're wrong though because I don't find the 1 in 4 "statistic" (which is a figure based on a very flawed survey from the 80s) plausible and still have had multiple deeply personal conversations with women where such things and other issues have been revealed.I firmly believe that anyone who doesn't find the 1 in 4 statistic plausible may wish to consider why none of the women they know have ever felt comfortable enough to talk of such things.
I haven't always held that view so please no one take that as a jibe, but as a learning opportunity.
I don't know any women who have restraining orders, I tend to mix with decent people. Why did you say that?There‘s obviously comfort in their restraining orders and pepper spray.