Ok, here is an idea, choose A or B.
A - Carry on taking the knee this season
B - Teams link arms this season
It would be B for me.
Ok, here is an idea, choose A or B.
A - Carry on taking the knee this season
B - Teams link arms this season
It would be B for me.
I haven't seen anyone saying that you are not allowed to boo. It is just frowned on by many. It does say something about your mindset though that you would take the proactive step of booing, which in itself is probably pointless, against something you think is a pointless waste of time.
I think taking the knee is a harmeless gesture that is a very small step in trying to right what is wrong. It will eventually be replaced or dropped. The links to BLM are just a smoke-screen though for racists not wanting to admit they are racists. It's just a gesture taken up by normal people trying to do something.
... this is yet another run at an oft repeated topic ... however sincere, it's become boring.
How about facing the real problem which is the failed policy of multiculturalism. All it has produced is envy - you've got more than me so I want the same as you; never mind that you may have worked for your status/trappings.
The multicultural policy, introduced by Bliar and Co, was simply a means of gaining electoral votes; never mind the consequences.
So we live in a country where the 10-15% tail is wagging the 80-85% dog. It's not right and you know it.
And probably what you'll get in the stadium.
It's fair to assume people go to football matches to watch football but I don't think you can really make assumptions about their views for or against anything else. As others have said in the past, there are differing views about the merits/motives of taking the knee, participating in Remembrance/Poppy Day commemorations or any other 'gesture' you may care to mention.
The best course of action would probably be to put the ball on the centre spot and kick it and leave everything else at the stadium gates, but if the football authorities choose to accommodate pre-match gestures, rituals and events, then in a free country you've got to expect and accept the right of people to express an opinion, be that positive, negative or neutral.
Come to think of it, there have been times watching Notts in the past where it might not even have been a safe assumption that people wanted to see the football match! Some of them might have bought a season ticket and felt obliged to show up.
I've read some breathtakingly stupid theories on here over the years, but do you honestly see multiculturalism as a "Blair policy"??? Multiculturalism was something that was bound to happen worldwide as soon as foreign travel became easily accessible around 50 or so years ago. People from different countries, different religions, and different skin colours met each other and decided that nationality, religion and skin colour didn't have to be a barrier to actually liking each other. Some still think it's wrong, and that England should be a white and Christian country. It will probably take a century or more for bigotry to become a real minority view, but the changes I have seen in my lifetime leads me to believe that it will happen one day.