Home » Spurs Fan Spots The Craziest Thing On His Fiancé’s Ultrasound Picture| image

Spurs Fan Spots The Craziest Thing On His Fiancé’s Ultrasound Picture| image

By The Boy -

Tottenham fan Jordan Hall is one very proud dad to be, as he and his fiancé Shannon Pickin are expecting the pitter-patter of tiny feet. The thing is, are the feet going to be wearing football boots?

Jordan was actually wearing a Spurs shirt when he accompanied his partner to a regular check-up when the ultrasound picture picked up something in the image that had more than a passing resemblance to the cockerel on Jordan’s top.

On me head, son.

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EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago
Reply to  Paul

Well said. 👏👏. Ben Shapiro is an absolute d*ck but he did once say “facts don’t care about feelings”. That certainly applies here.

Paul
Paul
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

You clueless about the subject. Whenever there is voter fraud, it is usually Republicans. But dont let the truth get in the way of your nonsense.

Paul
Paul
2 years ago

There is institutional racism. Admitting it means you would need to do somenthing about it. Period. Am not going to argue with privilege people who do not understand a simple traffic stop whether you corporate or not could end up with you being shot for reaching to license and registration. The police being at the forefront and the first authority you encountered are being over exaggerated, but racism is rampant throughout our society.

Paul
Paul
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

What an ass of a comment. You are the problem.

Paul
Paul
2 years ago

You are so misguided. Why should the blackman spend his time advocating for other ethnicity when they themsleves feel some form of superiority to blacks. I do believe, it should be adjust across the board, but blacks are the only race including other minority in their agenda. That is what I see here in the US. Black crime is always a boogeyman to stray from the real issue. White folks that cannot put forward a cogent argument resort to that talking point. Inequality is a glaring and we just keep moving. How many black or minority managers are currently in the Premier League. How many match day Officials are minority. How many minority are in front office positions. You cannot make concrete changes if all the decision makers bare no resemblance of those calling for change.

Last edited 2 years ago by Paul
EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago

Again, agreed.

EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago

You do make a very good point and something that I agree with.👏

EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

What you don’t realise that the so called “free ID” requires evidence to obtain it such as birth certificates which many poor or impoverished people do not have and they are required to travel to get to the voter office and the time off from work and expense incurred prevents them from doing so, therefore it’s not free in the strictest sense and that costs money.

You’re indulging this myth that voter fraud is sufficiently widespread to justify increased ID requirement which is simply not correct. Since 2000 only 31 credible incidences of voter fraud were identified that could’ve been prevented by ID against 1 billion votes being cast. As quoted from a recent study on voter fraud:-

However, extensive research reveals that fraud is very rare, voter impersonation is virtually nonexistent, and many instances of alleged fraud are, in fact, mistakes by voters or administrators. The same is true for mail ballots, which are secure and essential to holding a safe election amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Even the DOJ couldn’t find any evidence of wide spread voter fraud and they were staffed by many Trump appointees.

As to your last comment, not even going to respond to something as abjectly ridiculous as that.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

And, yes, we are more progressive than the USA, though we are not as well integrated racially as our politicians like to say we are.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  EssexTony

I probably would feel the same way, yes, and I did say perfectly understandable.I’m not saying they should pander to our sensibilities though a little humour and an acknowledgement that not every white man is really a racist can help, but these days you can hardly open your mouth without some Wokist claiming you’re a racist. For instance, if you voice that you don’t particularly care for some black person who is in the public eye you get branded a racist by these types, though you know your reasons for not liking them have nothing to do with the colour of their skin.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago

You forgot George Soros:-)

eddie
eddie
2 years ago

Black on black crime in the US is far higher than black on white.The Marxist leader of BLM in London who was shot in the head was another black on black crime apparently.Yet they’re not willing to comment on the fact and none of them are helping the police with their enquiries.
Evidentally black lives matter,but not to other blacks.Go figure.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago
Reply to  EssexTony

Many of the states offer a free voter photo ID card if individuals don’t already have some form of photo ID. This advice is taken from a US.gov website. So what you say is simply not true. The Democrats are chucking the toys out of the pram for 2 reasons. Firstly, it will reduce the amount of voter fraud and secondly the majority of those who can’t be arsed to get the required ID are usually Democrat voters.

EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

Read my post again and you will understand. I didn’t say that having to have voter ID was discrimination. However, it is discrimination when the object of the law is to introduce requirements that specifically target ethnic groups and make it so difficult for them to vote that they give up trying. An example is the requirement to have specific types of ID where the costs of these are such that those on low incomes cannot afford to pay for it and which disproportionately affects ethnic groups. That’s the real world.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago

The days when they had Gray and Keys, who I’ve sometimes watched on BEIN Sports more recently and are far more entertaining than extremely dull Carragher and Neville.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago

You know, people at Stalin’s rallies used to be scared to stop applauding first, in complete fear that the police or KGB would drag them in and ask why they stopped before anyone else. The applause used to go on so long that some people’s hands bled.

Essentially that’s what’s going on here…

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago
Reply to  EssexTony

Requirement for ID to vote is discrimination?!!! And you say I’m not living in the real world!

Last edited 2 years ago by Ragnar
EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago

”Was” being the operative word. The incident you refer to was in 2007 and it was at gunpoint and the woman was not pregnant as has been alleged. He went to prison in 2009 and did his time, being paroled in 2013. After leaving prison he did not engage in any criminal activity that can be found although he did have one or two minor incidence around driving license irregularities. He died because of a counterfeit $20 note and the police officer’s actions were entirely disproportionate to the offence.

EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago

I understand where you are coming from but don’t agree. Those who are being discriminated shouldn’t pander to people’s sensibilities to gain sympathy for their argument. Get the message across more effectively, yes, but not water it down. They’re angry and embittered mostly for good reason. If you were in their shoes you’d probably feel the same way, especially when discrimination has been going on for as long as it has.

In my view the UK has much more to do, but we’ve come a long way and are certainly more progressive than the US where a significant portion of the population is happy with the current status quo. The fact that many Republican states are implementing voter ID & suppression laws that are directly affecting people from ethnic backgrounds says a lot about where they are as a country.

Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago

Who indeed?

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  Marbella Spur

Anne Boleyn being portrayed by a black actress recently seemed to be making a point. I look forward to Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King being portrayed by WHITE actors!

Of course, I realize the above isn’t an entirely valid comparison because the two gentlemen above need really to be played by black actors since the colour of their skin and the racist discrimination they suffered and were fighting against is the whole point of their story, whereas the colour of Boleyn’s skin is of no great significance.

EssexTony
EssexTony
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

So the fact that Republican states are implementing laws as I write this to suppress voter participation which aligns itself to Democratic voters and in turn discriminates against ethnic minorities who tend to vote mainly democrat is not an example of systemic racism today? Some states are implementing tightening of ID for voting which directly discriminates against ethnic communities and this is going to get worse. Sorry, you’re not living in the real world if you genuinely believe that systemic racism doesn’t exist in the US. It’s rife, and Republicans are so emboldened since Trump was President that they are falling over themselves to get this done quickly so they can influence the next election and get either Trump or a Trumpite elected. “Land of the Free” is joke now.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.businessinsider.com/us-systemic-racism-in-charts-graphs-data-2020-6%3Famp

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

I believe France has, while in Portugal there is said to be racial tensions between Cape Verdeans and Angolans.

dembeleshapedhole
dembeleshapedhole
2 years ago

Back in the early days of Sky Sports, Soccer AM would regularly refer to womens’ football as “monkey tennis” . Then the agenda changed.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

Re bigotry, I was looking up on the net again about Belfast Celtic, who used to be the chief rivals to Linfield. Linfield are the protestant club, while Celtic in West Belfast were predominantly catholic, though about 10 per cent of their support was protestant. Anyway, things became so heated between the fans of these two clubs that after one game between the two sides at Linfield’s Windsor Park ground, the Celtic players were attacked by Linfield fans and one Celtic player, Jimmy Jones, had his leg broken and was kicked on the ground and rendered unconscious. The RUC apparently stood by and did nothing to quell the riot, not raising a baton. Belfast Celtic, as a result, decided in 1949 to leave the Irish League, realizing it wasn’t a football problem but something they couldn’t do anything about, that catholics at the time could expect little protection from the authorities. They went on a tour of the USA in 1949 where, startlingly, they met and defeated 2-0 a Scotland team that otherwise went undefeated on a nine match tour and which had won all three of their matches in the Home International Championship, including England 3-1 at Wembley.

dembeleshapedhole
dembeleshapedhole
2 years ago

Keep going, eventually they will stop repeating the mantras they’ve been programmed with by MSM/Govs etc and think about it.
You can put red ants and black ants in a jar and they will coexist happily ad infinitum. Shake the jar and cause a commotion and they massacre each other.
So who’s shaking our jar?

dembeleshapedhole
dembeleshapedhole
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

They know what’s what…… Bhagvad Gita, Vedic traditions, Mahabharat ……they get on with their lives and ignore the show/distractions

dembeleshapedhole
dembeleshapedhole
2 years ago

Swastika is ancient and peaceful Describes technology/knowledge. Was usurped and purpose inverted as with many symbols yet their truth remains visible once you acquaint yourself with occult ( hidden not bad) knowledge.

dembeleshapedhole
dembeleshapedhole
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

Correct, who is it always telling us how many “ism”s are plaguing the world and its all our fault. Divide and conquer.
They? just follow the money/funding. The east is murkier but In the west, all roads eventually lead to
Vatican, Washington District of Colombia, City of London. 3 individual sovereign states with no ties to the countries where they are located.
Holy See, Papal bulls, Maritime/Admiralty Law, Think Tanks: Tri Lateral, Council on Foreign Relations, Committee of 300, Club of Rome, Tavistock, Open Society, Common Purpose, WEF etc, Dutch East indies trading co, Five Start Trust, Moss@d, Alphabet agencies, IMF, BIS, J P Morgan, Astors, Rockefeller, Rothschild, Bush, to name a few, “Royal families”, numerous italian based black nobility and more you will never have heard of like a Mark Malloch- Brown. Interesting name!
“neutral” Switzerland /octagon group also.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  Marbella Spur

Yes, agreed! I’m laughing at your opening remark.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

Mind you, there is a Russian (albeit European Russian, so to speak) influence in some of the architecture in their capital city of Helsinki in the area around Senate Square similar to that of St Petersburg.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

I didn’t realize the Finns were allies of Nazi Germany; but they naturally loathed the Russians.

Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago

I was referring more to the segregation side of things. Like East said, you will always get people who don’t like other ethnic or racial types. Indians that don’t like blacks, blacks that don’t like whites. Whites that don’t like Pakistanis….etc

Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago

There’s always going to be pockets of it, but generally people don’t care about race they just want to get on with life.

Marbella Spur
Marbella Spur
2 years ago

If you were an alien visiting this country and switched on Sky Sports, you would think that half of this country is black. I am sick to death of Sky promoting BLM. When you watch an advert, they always consist of having a noticeable amount of black faces. Quite absurd when you think that the black population makes up approximately 3% of the population. I am also fed up having to listen to some dopey bird’s commentary on football, cricket golf and rugby. Women’s professional sports are unwatchable. Let them commentate on their own sports.

Marbella Spur
Marbella Spur
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

I think if you check the statistics, more white men in the US are shot dead by the police than black men. The white middle class are deserting the major cities in the US due to the burgeoning crime rates and homeless people. The one thing these cities have in common is they have Democratic mayors who have decreased funding to the police, something the BLM want and now you can see the consequences.

Glory Costs Too Much
Glory Costs Too Much
2 years ago

Racism in the deep south of the USA is a LOT more recent than 50 years ago.

Glory Costs Too Much
Glory Costs Too Much
2 years ago

During WW2 (and just previous in their conflict with Russia) the Finns used their own version of the swastika. Ironic really as they went on to become allies of Nazi Germany. Likewise their wartime emblem is also banned. Though it’s important to note that Finland was in no way responsible for any excesses the way Germany was, rather they both had a common enemy in Communist Russia, an equally loathsome regime.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

True, Algerians have never been treated that well by France. They had Algerian troops fighting for them in WW2 yet barely recognised their contribution. I agree, also, that France is heading towards civil war in some of those cities. Even some of their retired and current military generals have said as much. I also think the US is slowly headed in that direction, too, if these poisonous narratives continue apace over there.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago

True, their history with discrimination is not great, especially the Jim Crow laws. But that was yesteryear and I genuinely don’t think that there is any systemic racism existing there today.

Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

Irony being we are getting closer to Stalinism than ever with this political agenda using faux equality as its battering ram.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago

The huge French Algerian population in France are pretty much excluded from most of mainstream French life. I’ve spent a fair amount of time all over France over the years and the racial tension in that country is really quite noticeable. The non-Algerian French don’t seem to like the Algerians and the Algerians don’t seem to like them very much either. They can’t get a job or anything.

Almost been in some scrapes, when an Algerian gang heard I was British they just sort of mumbled and said “whatever”. If I’d have been French I would definitely have got a kicking.

That country has massive racial tensions…

Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago

Yes. They’ve had a past. But that was 50 plus years ago.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

TV now relentlessly promoting their diversity agenda with female and black presenters (on one of the matches, yesterday this one girl, offering her insights, sounded about 15!)

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

I do have to say that the USA has had terrible racist discrimination, almost on a par with South Africa; for instance, black jazz musicians in a club or hotel would have to use the back entrance or the entrance to the kitchen while whites could stroll through the front etc. there would be such a to do getting black performers off the bus and into these clubs.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

Yes, valid point.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

While I ,of course, don’t condone what happened to George Floyd, which was quite appalling, he was a fairly bad egg, once holding a pregnant woman at knifepoint.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago

There will always be racists somewhere, people that don’t like other people because they look different from themselves. Probably a part of the darker nature of the human condition, we are essentially tribal animals. We often group together and tend to ghettoise ourselves, all races do it, regardless of if they’r actually racist or not.

The job of government and society is to make sure that the way we live as modern humans is adhered to. That means we don’t go to war every five minutes, invade other lands, rape and pillage the village next door because they handed on our patch etc.

No cohesive society can exist while there is racism and bigotry, most sensible people understand that. Educate yes, but treat people as intelligent with their own free will. Otherwise we might as well go back to Stalinism..

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

Thank you for pointing that out, Eastie, re the original hashtag which, of course, was entirely relevant and appropriate as I can now fully appreciate.

Nikhil
Nikhil
2 years ago

I don’t care about Marxist undertones to the movement, if any. The fact is that taking the knee is nothing but a publicity stunt. Nobody really cares about oppression.

These players will go to Qatar for the world cup without hesitation. Does it matter whether or not Qatar used what many consider to be slave labour for building the stadiums? Of course not.
Will these players raise questions about the human rights violations in china? No, that would incur financial losses to them.

Taking the knee is not a product of principle, it is a product of publicity, these players would not stand up for something that will actually cause them financial harm.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

Yeah I take your point Simon, although I’m not getting into that part of it now. Just the specific original intention behind the hashtag.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

If you’re a fair minded and decent human being, that is!

Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

It’s ridiculous. To call this country or America a racist country is just wrong. These people don’t seem concerned with places with real problems. China for instance.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

In the US black people disproportionately die at the hands of the police but this isn’t at straightforward as one might think. Most of the deaths, after investigation, are deemed as a result of proportionate force; the Floyd case was an exception hence the widespread coverage. Furthermore, black people in the US commit a much higher rate of violent crime than any other ethnic group (the FBI stats back that up before anyone accuses me of racism) so therefore they are disproportionately arrested more. These things are never black and white and the MSM and the likes of BLM and the people pushing them don’t like to discuss these finer details.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago
Reply to  SimonSpur

The UK isn’t the US either and this idea that everything that goes on there has to be mirrored here is completely bonkers. Also, I bet they haven’t had such organisations in American sport for so long and with such a profile as we have had with Kick It Out. America’s whole history and social structure is so completely different.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  East Stand

Couldn’t agree more, Eastie.

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

I understand people feel passionate about such issues but coming across as angry and embittered (even if perfectly understandable) can alienate those of us otherwise sympathetic to their views. I have a cd of Lena Horne live during which, between songs, she looks back on her career. At one point, she mentions how for a film part, she had to wear some make up called light Egyptian to make her look less black (even though she was only light sepia anyway). In the end, they smothered her friend,Ava Gardner, in light Egyptian and gave her the part instead. Now this story told has an amusing effect (on me, at least!) while, at the same time, poking fun at racism in a good humoured way and, of course, pointing out how ridiculous racism is; I’m right behind her and, in that instance, how can you not be?

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago

It’s doing more harm than good, and while the basic message is right, the way it’s being done is all wrong.

A massive amount of it of it is virtue signalling, you only have to look at all the brands and companies trying to align itself with it to make sure they keep trending on social media. They’re just trying to be seen as ‘good’ by association, it’s quite pathetic really. Childish in fact…

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago

BLM is divisive and they know it, and that it why they are pushing it. Who ‘they’ are is unclear but perhaps up for debate. As HH says, KickitOut is the right campaign for this, and they know it, but it’s not divisive.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago

The original hashtag ‘Black Lives Matter’ was intended to raise awareness of African Americans being far more likely to die when in contact with the police than any other ethic group, and particularly compared to white people.

Trying to roll that three word statement out as a broad, global anti racist message was always going to cause issues because most people know that black lives matter anyway, like all life ‘matters’. People are thinking “Black lives matter? Of course they do, why wouldn’t they?” I think a lot of people are basically ignoring the fact that the name of the whole thing is far from ideal…

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago
Reply to  BaleUsOut

And, of course, Jews and Catholics etc. ALL LIVES MATTER (and not just black ones!). As you rightly say, it’s not just blacks that are subjected to racism, though I appreciate they’ve received some disgusting treatment through the years.

East Stand
East Stand
2 years ago

As well intentioned the vast majority of people’s support, involvement (whatever) in BLM is and has been, the reality is that it is an incoherent, global hashtag phenomenon. Nobody can actually clearly define it’s objectives other than it being ‘anti racist’, and in this case being anti racist regarding one particular ethic group.

I had a discussion with this with some people and I was making the point about Kick It Out, Give Racism The Red Card and that those organisations would also cover the problem of racism towards an asian player. The fact that there are so few Asian players playing in England, from South East Asia or the Asian subcontinent (hardly any in the football pyramid) makes this very much a side issue. However, it is entirely relevant to the overall discussion.

Kick It Out is an anti-racist organisation, BLM is a hashtag phenomenon with it’s roots firmly in the USA, and in fact originally with radical and militant politics.I guarantee, almost nobody would know about the Marxist element. This is the problem, people are willing to follow anything because it’s ‘trending’, this is more important than actually educating oneself.

The anti-racist message is NOT a political statement in itself, which is why Kick It Out and Give Racism The Red Card have all of this already covered. They stand alone with one clear objective.

I think we have gotten to a point where BLM is actually doing more damage to race relations than good. How would you feel if you are Asian and have experienced racism, yet you are completely excluded from all of this?

We then start to hear that the whole thing is actually really about ‘all’ bigotry in the world, it sort of covers all of it. So it covers; bigotry towards ALL races, sexism, homophobia ageism, rights for the disabled, the homeless, the mentally ill, ex service men and women with PTSD, the autistic and those with Asperger’s etc etc etc? Well it doesn’t, so don’t pretend it does in an attempt to avoid the awkward questions.

People are being tired of preached to, of effectively being told they’re probably a biggot but they just haven’t been educated about it yet. It’s not good enough, and it’s not good enough when you have perfectly decent organisations doing great work on the issues, without all of this baggage to go with it. Anti-racism is not benefitting from this current malaise whatsoever..

Richard David Bernard Taylor
Richard David Bernard Taylor
2 years ago

Interestingly, Bette Davis has just appeared where you were, Harry! Your shirt, by the way, looks like the interior lining of my mack!

Another informative daily briefing. As I’ve said before, All Lives Matter! As for the swastika, Hitler picked up the idea from a church, I believe. (did the vicar in this church wear a swastika? Can’t remember but I do remember watching this programme on tv and Hitler’s swastika deriving from this.

SimonSpur
SimonSpur
2 years ago

The truth is that the Asians don’t complain much about their alleged lack of representation, they just get on with their lives. Look at TV adverts, you don’t see too many of them but there are so many black people in ads nowadays it’s ridiculous. They are vastly overrepresented, yet there are more Asian people in this country.

Last edited 2 years ago by Ragnar
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
2 years ago
Reply to  BaleUsOut

Important point about the other ethnicitys. How many Bangladeshi/Indian kids do you see in academy’s etc? There was a doc about it a while back. Most of the England team is black, nobody’s prejudice towards them, but these south Asian kids don’t get a look in, and if you use the argument that there aren’t as many that’s exactly why you don’t have alot of black managers. You can’t have it both ways. Britain and America is a majority white country demographically. You wouldn’t go to Senegal and demand…”where all the white boys at??” The word racist has been bastardized to a degree that it means nothing now.

Last edited 2 years ago by Is Gascoigne gonna have a crack?
Lilywhite without the ll
Lilywhite without the ll
2 years ago
Reply to  BaleUsOut

No one booing is racist ffs…..people are simply booing because they’ve had enough of this crap…utter shameful if people say they are racist……

I’m looking forward to seeing how they justify the death camps at the World Cup construction sites, most being of black/Indian origin….listen as the tumbleweed rolls by….

BaleUsOut
BaleUsOut
2 years ago

Another problem with BLM is that its restricting the issue of racism to Blacks when in reality racist abuse in our society is also dealt out to Indians, Chinese, Eastern Europeans etc.

So this encourages just one community to feel they are the only ones subjected to racism, the are object of being singled out when in effect it’s a wider group.

In my opinion the BLM tag was a knee jerk reaction and an I’ll judged one, albeit with good intentions.

So many decent people now feel guilty if they dont explain they are not a racist. Its ridiculous.

An example of this are the commentators who describe those booing players taking the knee as racists. They dont know why they are booing, could be for other well thought out reasons.

Yes. Bring back Kick It Out and I may say, start blocking the ISPs of social media websites who do not make a determined effort to prevent racist or abusive comments being published which is where alot of this stuff originates.

Believe me, with the millions in lost revenue they will come up with a solution overnight!

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