ChatterBank1 min ago
The hooligan rears his ugly head again
It's shameful and disgusting behaviour and I can see how anyone can defend it.
For anyone not aware of the latest repugant actions of the england supporters click here http://www.itv.com/news/1398119.html
and not content with wrecking other countries they ran amok at home as well http://icsouthlondon.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/nati
onalnews/tm_objectid=14330942&method=full&siteid=50100&headline=83-held-as-england-fans-riot-name_page.html
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The term hatred has been used to describe my attitude towards the english....this is sadly over the mark by people over-reacting to comments at my disgust at the continual bombardment of the "engerland" culture in the run up to these tournaments.....I have no problem with individual english people but the media hype and spin would try the patience of a saint.
In contrast to the study by Armstrong and Harris, the work of Richard Giulianotti on Scottish fans is far more theory-based and substantially more detailed. His research with Scottish football fans, at home and in other countries such as Sweden, has highlighted the inapplicability of much of the research conducted in England, and the theoretical perspectives associated with it. Rather than football violence stemming from social structural factors, Giulianotti argues that Scottish football fan behaviour derives from specific cultural and historical forces. This, in turn, distinguishes the 'friendly' Scottish fans quite sharply from their English 'hooligan' peers. In a recent paper he notes the fact that 5,000 fans, known as 'The Tartan Army', won the UEFA 'Fair Play' award in 1992 for their friendly and sporting conduct.20 This appeared to represent a distinct cultural change in the activities of Scottish fans since their pitch invasion after a match against England at Wembley in 1977 and the removal of the goalposts.
Prior to 1980 Scottish fans were seen as exemplars of the heavy drinking, macho style of hooligans whose pitched battles were amongst the bloodiest in Britain. Alcohol, rather than divisive social issues, was generally viewed by the authorities and some social scientists as being the primary ingredient for transforming relatively ordinary supporters into mindless thugs. Many of these fans also relied for part of their identity on being 'harder' than the English fans, and clashes between the two groups were common. This image of Scottish fans, or 'sub-discourse' in Giulianotti's terms ' detracted from more meaningful examination of the roots of hooligan behaviour, to be found partly in religious sectarianism.
After 1980 a distinct change occurred ' a new sub-discourse. Increasingly, Scottish fans sought to distance themselves from the 'British hooligan' label and particularly from the unruly behaviour of English fans abroad. Having been prevented from playing their biennial matches against England at Wembley, following the small problem with the demolition of the goal posts, they constructed a quite novel way of maintaining a sense of dominance over them.
'Spurred on by the popular stereotypification of the antithetical English fan as instrumental soccer hooligan, and the international debate on subsequently penalizing English soccer which tended to conflate English and British fans, Scottish fans coated themselves, with the brush of the authorities and the media, in a friendly and internationalist patina ...'
In other words, Scottish fans sought to beat their historical foes by being nice! In this they certainly succeeded.....finding considerable satisfaction in this new image, the role of heavy drinking among Scottish fans now took on a new twist. Alcohol consumption did not decline with the rise of the 'friendly' image. Rather, the meaning of drinking was radically transformed. Instead of it being a precursor of violence it was held to predispose friendly interaction and sociability, particularly towards strangers abroad, but possibly with the exception of the English.
The reason I haven't called for any sanctions against any other countries is simply that with the exception of the high profile turkish/leeds episode I am not aware of any other trouble...if the other countries have as long a list and the violence is comparable then obviously the same sanctions should apply....the engerland nonsense is impossible to escape as it's rammed down your throat.......miteyboosh (sic) regardless of your believeing this or not (or anyone else for that matter) I had no prepared answers for this question....I was well aware that some people would think that simply because it was me posting the question that they would jump to the wrong conclusion...the fact that some people can't be big enough and just completely condemn this is sad and blinkered.
Regardless of who posted the question the point remains when you look at the long list of english violence abroad at football tournaments isn't it time that the team were banned as this seems the only threat that will stop the violence and terror these idiots cause every other summer?
My point about England's football standing is that they seem capable of making it to the last eight - even four perhaps - but that's about it. Well...this the last third of a century seems to have confirmed. So, why don't their fans "get it"?
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