Enoch Powell was right. Well this thread was heading there and we finally arrived.
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Enoch Powell was right. Well this thread was heading there and we finally arrived.
Depressing but also shocking. I don't know whether attitudes have regressed over the past 5 years (with the Brexit campaign as a trigger) or if the change in political culture and pervasiveness of social media has taken the lid off what was hiding before.
The massive positive is the way the BLM camapign has grown - and it feels in some places that a tipping point has passed. The stance of English and Welsh clubs - the NHS/BLM support on the shirts, giving the knee etc - may have much more of an impact than the demonstrations and removals of slaver-related symbols.
But politics has polarised everywhere (led by what has happened in the USA), in some places society has polarised, and there is no doubt that opinions on this board have polarised. Depressing.
Right, let's start with the wall of gammon. Let's say that wall contained 9 black people and was called the wall of ***insert a food that looks like a black man***. It would be labelled racist I'm almost sure of it regardless of who posted the original piece. It would be especially so if hijacked by say Britain First and used by them.
I don't like being labelled as racist when I am not simply falling in line with what certain posters post here. I think people who do this need a look at themselves.
I'm also not sure why you're giving me a BLM lesson again. I haven't once knocked the BLM. Respond to the posters who have questioned it.
TLG posts that it can't be a racist term because it was thought up by white people. By that reckoning most black names would not be racist if they were originally from a black person to another.
I believe they would/could be as names can evolve and take on different meanings, being used in other ways and also be looked at differently with time. The name is based on somebody's skin colour, be it enraged and flushed or not. Put what spin you like on it, a gammon can only be a white man.
TLG just has his little clever remarks when he has nothing further and will question the other posters intellect while carefully picking through the posts and picking the parts he thinks he can respond to. A gem in this thread that sums him up is 'Let me have a wild guess, are you 40-70, white male.....'. Who does he think he is? He really does see himself as some kind of font of knowledge around here doesn't he.
Carry on lads. Sorry for even questioning it.
Carry on shooting down anybody that dare move from what the more prominent posters say.
I would add though that if I was boycotting and said I would never watch the club again and was then found to be attending I wouldn't be on here acting all high and mighty. Each to their own.
I think it's very much the latter. Throughout the Brexit campaign the truth about beliefs and attitudes of large swathes of the general public in the UK was gradually revealed and the whole affair clearly emboldened the legions of bigots and racists among us. I don't think there's any doubt about that.
Bandying around terms such as 'snowflake' and 'gammon' do not help intelligent debate. Neither does irrelevant analogies and the use of what is referred to these days as 'whatabaoutisms'.
End of sermon.
Bless you all.
That's not what I said, but discussing this subject with you is clearly pointless. You asked a question, and yet it was blatantly rhetorical as you'd obviously already made up your mind that 'gammon' is a racist term, and in order to reinforce your belief you've used some utterly ridiculous examples. You didn't want a discussion, you wanted to make a point and it was a daft one.
Incidentally, if you read the thread back I didn't state you were a white male aged 40 to 70 either, but don't let that bother you. You clearly don't understand plain English as you've demonstrated clearly in your comments about my re-brand protests.
It's a shame you're so far up your own arse as it's a lovely day outside.
But as you're posting on a message board, just like me, why not take a few minutes to enjoy a racist video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGxS...lopianCanoeist
The Libyan bloke involved in that attack was either a muslim fundamentalist or he was homophobic as all the men killed were gay
I dont think he was a racist , most of his mates were white
He also had serious mental health problems
Many inner city areas of large cities are predominately mixed or muslim or afro Caribbean, birds of a feather etc , its surely no surprise to you that you went to an inner city area of birmingham and there were mostly non white people and the local shop catered for the local ethnic minority population ?
I live near a school and a catholic church . During term time the roads are blocked and driveways blocked with parents cars , and on a Sunday the church lot turn up to do the same .
It's annoying but it doesnt make me feel uneasy
Feck me. This goes down as one of the most ignorant messages I've ever read. You have capably shown how you've misjudged the entire thing and shifted it to your far right agenda. I've been through your post history and you make Nick Griffin look like a moderate.
The fact you want to crush anyone in solidarity with black people against racism towards them makes you a rather dangerous racist.
Not interested in the rest of your post but veg1960 has posted a link to a survey that shows police are nearly 7 times more likely to stop a black man than at white man in south wales
Of course as you are white and you have never seen the police stop a black man randomly and if they have they obviously had a reason then ignore the survey
"outraging public decency". A rather subjective count, open to interpretation and bias. If it were in front of a group of kids, or a group of picnickers, yes, but he was facing the wall - and I doubt anyone was 'outraged' except the BLM supporter who took the photo and alerted the coppers. Did he have a solicitor ? I doubt it.
Taken from today's Times;-
"Football fan behind White Lives Matter stunt didn’t break law, say police
Ben Ellery, Martyn Ziegler
Wednesday June 24 2020, 12.01am, The Times
Manchester City Football Club
Premier League
Football
Jake Hepple, left, with Tommy Robinson, claimed responsibility for the stunt
Jake Hepple, left, with Tommy Robinson, claimed responsibility for the stunt
SHAUN BOTTERILL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
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Police investigating a football fan who paid a pilot to fly a banner reading White Lives Matter over a Premier League match said last night that no crime was committed.
Jake Hepple, a Burnley supporter, claimed responsibility for the stunt during his team’s match against Manchester City on Monday and wrote on Facebook: “I’d like to take this time to apologise . . . to absolutely f***ing nobody!”
The aerial display, held above City’s Eithad Stadium after players had got down on one knee in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, was widely condemned. Ben Mee, the Burnley captain, said that he was “shamed and embarrassed”.
Last night Chief Superintendent Russ Procter, of Lancashire police, who had been liaising with Greater Manchester police, the Aviation Authority and the Crown Prosecution Service over the matter, said: “After assessing all the information available surrounding this incident we have concluded that there are no criminal offences that have been disclosed at this time.”
Paradigm Precision, an engineering company that employs Mr Hepple, of Colne, Lancashire, said it was investigating his conduct. His partner, Megan Rambadt, was suspended by her employer, Solace Foot Health, after messages emerged in which she appeared to make racist slurs. Air Ads, which flew the aircraft, is based in Stockport and flies from Blackpool airport. One of its directors, Alan Elliott, was fined £2,000 in 2017 for flying 400ft above Everton’s stadium to display a sign. By law he should not have been lower than 1,000ft over a congested area.
Blackpool airport yesterday suspended banner flights from its base and said it was “outraged by this incident”.
It is thought that members of the Suicide Squad, a group of violent Burnley fans, spent the past week crowdfunding for the banner and flyover. In 2003 Burnley was described in the media as the “racist capital of Britain” after eight councillors representing the British National Party were elected. Since then the influence of the BNP on the council has disappeared and the football club has actively encouraged supporters to report racist abuse.
Charlie Briggs, leader of Burnley Council, said: “He’s [Mr Hepple] not representing Burnley. That is not what the town is all about. The town isn’t racist any more, we’re away from that.”
A spokesman for Burnley Football Club said it “strongly condemns the actions of those responsible for the aircraft and offensive banner”, adding: “We wish to make it clear that those responsible are not welcome . . . This, in no way, represents what Burnley Football Club stands for and we will work fully with the authorities to identify those responsible and issue lifetime bans.”
Burnley fans have started a Go Fund Me page raising money for the Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust, set up in memory of the black teenager after he was killed in a racist attack in 1993."
The picture of the guy responsible shows him in a warm embrace with good old Tommy Robinson. There's a surprise.
I don't get you. You say you have complete sympathy towards black people for reasons you quote. Had you experienced racism for being white you'd have really experienced what the vast majority of black people experience quite regularly. You clearly have some solidarity with black people yet you can't support Black Lives Matter, which is quite mystifying.
The horrendous events at Reading aren't a part of the equation here. Say you supported Dogs Lives Matter and you have solidarity with all neglected dogs. You want to raise awareness of this in the hope everyone will join you. Someone says All Animals Lives Matter and claims that includes dogs. You think that it's a shame they can't join your campaign about neglected dogs. A litter of kittens get drowned. Someone then pipes up with Cats Lives Matter.
It's the same thing here. While it's all well and good saying all lives matter, and if those who want to feel a need to highlight white lives matter, this is specifically about solidarity with black people and raising awareness of the needless racism they face in our predominantly white country and western world and hope that can be put to an end. Saying all lives matter doesn't specifically say you have solidarity with black people in their struggles. If you feel you don't need to, you're a part of the problem.
9 pages and still going strong.
I don't support the BLM organistion.
I do agree that black people are just as worthwhile as white or any other colour.
I don't think I'm a racist.