Originally posted by teamsaint
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Room 101 - what single aspect of modern life should be consigned to oblivion?
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostVery much what people say about wars.
Get a grip, for Heaven's sake......Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by cloughie View Postit involves also a lot of loyalty, heartache, optimism and disappointment. Only the good weather fan will change allegiances from the club they support from an early age. There is violence at the fringes of the game, but between fans there is ardent banter, camaraderie and great deal of alliance in adversity.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI notice enjoyment wasn't a word you used, you live it, but it involves also a lot of loyalty, heartache, optimism and disappointment. Only the good weather fan will change allegiances from the club they support from an early age. There is violence at the fringes of the game, but between fans there is ardent banter, camaraderie and great deal of alliance in adversity.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostIt's not football as such that I dislike, but the way in which it has become hugely commercialised, with clubs flogging fans overpriced shirts (which change every season) when a scarf & woolly hat used to be enough, and also dominates the front pages of newspapers & lead items in radio & TV news, giving it far more importance than it deserves & making it difficult to avoid, when it used to be confined to sports pages & easy to ignore. As for the fans, if you live near a football ground you find pavements blocked as they spill out of pubs, cars parked where they shouldn't be, people pissing in your front garden, & daily life generally made more difficult.
Perhaps the press would increase circulation if they concentrated less on who Ryan giggs is meeting up with, and more on real issues like unnecessary wars, NHS Privatisation, tax scams for the rich (including footballers), toxic lifestyles, etc etc. Just a thought. I might even buy one.
As for bad behaviour, the kind of thing you describe used to happen a lot, but I honestly don't see much of it now. Perhaps i am in the wrong places. Bad fan behaviour has reduced substantially, (though it does still go on and bad behaviour near your home is very upsetting), and parking near football grounds nowadays, in my experience, means legal or ticket/clamping.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostFootball's over inflated importance, (especially of the premier league) is certainly nonsensical.but even most football fans, I suspect, are happy enough to read about their own team on the back pages, and couldn't care less about the front page drivel.
Perhaps the press would increase circulation if they concentrated less on who Ryan giggs is meeting up with, and more on real issues like unnecessary wars, NHS Privatisation, tax scams for the rich (including footballers), toxic lifestyles, etc etc. Just a thought. I might even buy one.
As for bad behaviour, the kind of thing you describe used to happen a lot, but I honestly don't see much of it now. Perhaps i am in the wrong places. Bad fan behaviour has reduced substantially, (though it does still go on and bad behaviour near your home is very upsetting), and parking near football grounds nowadays, in my experience, means legal or ticket/clamping.
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Eventually I came to see football fandom as a religious substitute or adjunct: belief or hope in something about which one can do nothing, a form of mass psychological assuagement by group identification, and a way of spending money on something functionally useless and ephemeral.
"a religious substitute or adjunct": worshipping at the Bayreuth shrine
"belief or hope in something about which one can do nothing": the almost invariably shattered hope or belief in the possibility of a tolerable production
"a form of mass psychological assuagement by group identification" : the Covent Garden crush bar and the Glyndebourne lawn (uniform de rigeur)
" a way of spending money on something functionally useless and ephemeral": I rest my case, m'lud
Still, people enjoy football and opera so they're both OK in my book
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBeing taken down Stamford Bridge by Dad as a nipper, when the team was people from the locale, more-or-less, and the only identity the team scarf, and that not obligatory, support once seemed to have some point to it, though I could never really get my head around rooting for something my actions had no hand in, apart from as one voice hollering among thousands. Eventually I came to see football fandom as a religious substitute or adjunct: belief or hope in something about which one can do nothing, a form of mass psychological assuagement by group identification, and a way of spending money on something functionally useless and ephemeral.
However, it's not all as silly as it may sometimes seem to the outsider. A football match can allow normally passive people to 'let off steam' in a relatively harmless way and some do have, you know, enough brains to appreciate the finer points of the game!
There are a lot of things in life that, on reflection, might seem pretty pointless maybe even life itself to some poor souls. Any form of art or sport might be described by those who lack appreciation as 'useless' and 'ephemeral'. Personally, i consider political marches and demonstrations to be very much in that category, but that seems to be an activity that others here positively relish.
Whatever turns one on, as they say, S_A ...
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