I am not really sure how these Non-League matters are dealt with.
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An interesting article. I think most people can see that the EDL are one of the biggest jokes going and that their membership is made up of cluless thugs. However to claim that the 'Petite bourgeoisie' are were facism is fostered is typical socialist chip-on-shoulder bollocks."tomoufc" wrote:Some food for thought about Luton and the EDL and football hooligans in general:
http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/artic ... mber=11183
UAF is probably the most fascist organisation in britain, if you go by the definition of the word 0_o"tomoufc" wrote:Some food for thought about Luton and the EDL and football hooligans in general:
http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/artic ... mber=11183
You clearly have no idea what you're talking about. When you say you've 'seen' EDL protests which side were you on? Where have UAF 'attacked' the EDL. What happens when UAF don't turn up? These facists are left to rampage pissed through our city centres attacking Asian, balck, gay people, trade unionists etc. Are you prepared to defend what the EDL/BNP did in Stoke?"Tethesis" wrote:UAF is probably the most fascist organisation in britain, if you go by the definition of the word 0_o"tomoufc" wrote:Some food for thought about Luton and the EDL and football hooligans in general:
http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/artic ... mber=11183
ive seen EDL protests, they arent violent, until the UAF trun up and attack them, so much for freedom of speech
'Petite Bourgeoisie' is a term (originally coined around the time of the French revolution I believe) that describes the middle class. What is meant by this is those that own a small business or undertaking, ususally either self-emoployed or employing a small amount of people. This has always been the class base of facist organisations."Beach Road End" wrote:An interesting article. I think most people can see that the EDL are one of the biggest jokes going and that their membership is made up of cluless thugs. However to claim that the 'Petite bourgeoisie' are were facism is fostered is typical socialist chip-on-shoulder bollocks."tomoufc" wrote:Some food for thought about Luton and the EDL and football hooligans in general:
http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/artic ... mber=11183
But you never recieve this right these days. You don't have to even be demonstrating to be killed by the Police. Look at the case of Ian Tomlinson...just an ordinary guy on his way home from work. Wrong place, wrong time."JoeyBeauchamp" wrote:
People are 100% entitled to the right to peaceful protest.
Yes you do - to take one isolated, albeit tragic case, to 'prove' you don't have the right to protest is illogical. Certainly the police can be accused of heavy-handedness when dealing with protests, but what came first - their aggressive attitude or the behaviour of elements of the crowd forcing their hand?"tomoufc" wrote:But you never recieve this right these days. You don't have to even be demonstrating to be killed by the Police. Look at the case of Ian Tomlinson...just an ordinary guy on his way home from work. Wrong place, wrong time."JoeyBeauchamp" wrote:
People are 100% entitled to the right to peaceful protest.
I was there mate. The police attacked us all day. The crowd were mainly middle-aged, included trade unionists, peace campaigners, old aged pensioners, children. We didn't (and neither did anyone else) want to 'start' anything, becuase we knew how violent the police are. In fact it was the police (or should I say the policing meathods) that created all of these problems. There are numerous reports of police brutality still being investigated. By the way how many protesters were convicted for doing anything illegal? A handful? I can only find 1 on the internet."JoeyBeauchamp" wrote:Yes you do - to take one isolated, albeit tragic case, to 'prove' you don't have the right to protest is illogical. Certainly the police can be accused of heavy-handedness when dealing with protests, but what came first - their aggressive attitude or the behaviour of elements of the crowd forcing their hand?"tomoufc" wrote:But you never recieve this right these days. You don't have to even be demonstrating to be killed by the Police. Look at the case of Ian Tomlinson...just an ordinary guy on his way home from work. Wrong place, wrong time."JoeyBeauchamp" wrote:
People are 100% entitled to the right to peaceful protest.
Just to get back to the original question, does anyone now when this matter will be dealt with?"Roo" wrote:Does anyone know when the F.A. or Football Conference will decide how to punish them for the incidents at the playoff semi against York?
I am not really sure how these Non-League matters are dealt with.