.Charlo wrote: » You dont know what they are thinking when they say it, when I think of the UVF I dont think of British people I think of fellas in balaclavas with guns.
dan1895 wrote: » Two Premier League teams played last weekend with 100,000 or so of their fans travelling to Madrid and there was no trouble. Why should they be banned for the actions of the national teams fans?
_blaaz wrote: » I think of collusion and all the innocents the british helped them.to kill
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Better safe than sorry surely Plenty of “firms” as they say in both those clubs They usually kick 7 shades of sh1te out of each other in waste ground or isolated industrial estates nowhere near the stadium. It’s all on YouTube if you care to research.
dan1895 wrote: » A handful of cnuts fighting in wasteground is no reason to go banning an entire league of clubs. What do you propose gets done about German, French, Polish, Dutch hooligans who act in a similar way?
suicide_circus wrote: » decent through ball from john sheridan followed by the best days work those guards ever did at 1min10sec
Nobelium wrote: » plenty irish people would join them singing fck the pope
blinding wrote: » Is it the dress that gets them horny !
Beechwoodspark wrote: » The ironic thing is most of those proudly waving the butchers apron are fascists/nazis of one shade or another !!
blinding wrote: » I don’t see how the Police beating the sh!te out of football hooligans is in any way Facist . I would say that it is a good effective way of dealing with football hooligans . They are always much better behave after having the sh!te beaten out of them . Very effective policing .
Beechwoodspark wrote: » You have it wrong- I was saying the English fans were nazis/fascists. Sheesh!!
mikemac2 wrote: » The local police do not scare them. Only thing that ever did were the Russian fans in Toulouse when they ran for the hills. No engerland chest thumping that day
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Very good idea. Great training project as you say. Also the dogs. Train the alsatians, Rhodesian ridgebacks etc on them
dodderangler wrote: » Nothing they do surprises me anymore. Can’t let them anywhere. Absolute scum. No time at all for them. Booze filled, coke heads the lot of them.
Ruraldweller56 wrote: » Are you sure they're English Hooligan football fans or just liberals from Ireland? At times it's hard to tell the difference.
oLoonatic wrote: » I don't see the problem here. "F the Pope and the IRA" Both have caused and/or covered up awful things over the last number of decades.
Timberrrrrrrr wrote: » Many of whom support teams in the lower leagues, but this guy wants to shut down the premiership:pac: Hasn't a clue what he's waffling on about and has no idea that he should stop digging.
citytillidie wrote: » I think he was hoping for more trouble from Liverpool fans in Madrid I mean his beloved Man Utd fans did the same taking over Barcelona and not a peep from him
blinding wrote: » The Spanish Police gave them a great hammering way back in the day (80s I think ) Again after that good hammering they were easy to talk to . Why do countries not just let their Riot Police and young recruits ( a blooding if you like ) beat the sh!te out of them at the first opportunity . A great training exercise . Where’s the downside ?
Fan of Netflix wrote: » stringhttps://twitter.com/Matt_Law_DT/status/1136601636217004034 Scum.https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2019/06/06/england-should-stop-playing-abroad-solution-found-fans-arrogance/
riffmongous wrote: » How stupid cam you get?
Anteayer wrote: » I'd prefix this by saying I'm not Catholic, I went as far as formally defecting from the Catholic Church having being brought up in a household that never even went to mass. I wouldn't know one end of a tabernacle from the other. As a somewhat outside observer, as Irishman who isn't catholic, my experience is that there's a significant issue in the UK with anti-Catholic sectarianism in a way that really isn't tolerated or dished out towards other religious groups and it seems to roll all the way back to Tudor-era propaganda when you start to pick it apart and some of it is undoubtedly anti-Irish too. In a whole load of occasions while living in open minded, liberal, London I have had people trying to tell me about my "catholic guilt". I'm an atheist, openly gay, no fan of organised religion at of any sort, strongly believe in having a secular state and would be far less likely to have any 'catholic guilt' complex than most of the people who were doling this stuff out. I've als had things like being told that "Ah you're not proper Irish - you're not even drunk mate!" and bing asked to pronounce 'th' over and over even though I don't don't pronounce it as D and even if I did, many of the people who were saying this pronounce it as "F" themselves, as in: "one, two, free! Uncle Arfur is in the barf!" Even in respected academic and media circles, there's this constant banging on about religion, or more so the 1500s period, in the UK, in a way I don't see in Ireland anymore and I definitely don't see in France or the Benelux.https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-18789154 "Discussion among eurozone leaders about the future of their single currency has become an increasingly divisive affair. On the surface, religion has nothing to do with it - but could Protestant and Catholic leaders have deep-seated instincts that lead them to pull the eurozone in different directions, until it breaks?" They don't even seem to bother to pay attention that many of the places they were deeming to be Catholic or Protestant aren't. Germany is decidedly mixed and some of its most economically conservative parts are very historically very Catholic, Austria's historically catholic, so's large chunks of the Netherlands, France is revolutionarily secular with a strongly Catholic history and the most impacted economy, Greece, is mostly Greek Orthodox, but sure why pay any attention to that when it gets in the way of a good stereotype about protestant work ethic and catholic confession boxes? Meanwhile the Anglican Church is probably the least dramatic of any reformation, it still even describes itself as a catholic church, it's just forked away from the Roman Catholic church but it was never really quite the same as the churches that broke off on profound theological differences, it was about Tudor era power and the fact that Spain, Britain's then arch nemesis empire, basically ran the Catholic Church at the time. Anyway, to cut a long story short, I think the English / British in general could do with actually acknowledging they have a problem with sectarianism. For all the looking on in horror at Northern Ireland's sectarian issues, a diluted, but still very present version of the same thing seems to crop up across English culture too, particularly after a feed of beers and a bit of jingoism - all of a sudden the filter's gone.