I never heard it sung at the Pitt, but I've heard it sung by our fans.
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I never heard it sung at the Pitt, but I've heard it sung by our fans.
Differing views on this I know but on balance I’ll favour Sir Alex Ferguson’s call 😅. The Brazilians, on the other hand, honed their skills on the beach a bit like the Aberdeen team of old so it’s not cut and dried, though the modern-day players perhaps enjoy their home comforts a little too much!
I heard it being sung while queueing to get in the south for a pigs game a few years back. Absolute f@cking lowlife scum
So its all good having a go at the hun who shouted at Brown but glass houses and all that(and rightly so). That song is the worst song I have ever heard at a fitba match bar none.
Singing about two people who died of cancer . Nae sure it gets much lower than that
Imagine the papers got a hold of that or it was filmed
Obviously nae a one time thing as Sneckie has heard it two. A few others have brought it up on here two. Mason89 being one
First and only time I heard it was away to ICT, the game when we were 4-nil up at half time and ended up hanging on to win 4-3.
It was a group of about half a dozen lads who looked about 30. A smoke bomb was let off in their vicinity , most likely by one of them.
They also had a classy ditty about Lennon and McCoist being *****s in their repertoire, although , strangely , nothing about Aberdeen.
Boris rattled big time 😀
Once 79 had come and gone, and those of us who were left with some optimism that a Scottish Assembly could still be established continued to meet and plot, and feed ideas into the Scottish Constitutional Convention whose output became the blueprint for what was offered in the 97 referendum, and was established in 99 following the adoption of the Scotland Act. Devolution, we expected, in line with a universally-expressed view, would be a process rather than a final destination. The expectation was that devolution would continue, and that in the spirit of subsidiarity, decision-making would, by design, be extended to citizens’ communities. The opposite has been our experience, with local authorities robbed of power by increased centralisation and by the threat of fiscal punishment if Holyrood’s preferences are not followed. The current party of government in Edinburgh, a zealous pursuer of central control, boycotted the Convention that created the plans for the structure from which it now governs. Maybe the concept of subsidiarity needs explaining to them before the Central Belt becomes Scotland’s equivalent of England’s resources-hoovering south east.
Very good article in today’s Scottish Review by Bill Paterson:
http://www.scottishreview.net/BillPaterson492a.html
Back on topic... fuuck off you manky hun ****s.
Last edited by 57vintage; 04-09-2019 at 09:58 AM. Reason: When I find myself in times of trouble, mother Mary comes to me, speaking words of wisdom
Huns going to take another battering today. Wonderful.