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A Support That Shames Scotland

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Tonight, at Starks Park, the sewers opened and the dregs of humanity came out.

I’m on the record as supporting unrestricted free speech. It’s caused a lot of arguments with people who think displays like tonight ought to be punishable.

Tonight hurts me, and sickens me, because it makes something I believe in passionately awfully goddamned hard to defend.

I can’t stomach the idea of jailing people because of the songs they sing.

It’s unacceptable when it happens to Celtic fans, and although there is zero moral equivalence between songs about a political and military struggle and what we’ve had to listen to tonight, the legal ground is dodgy and the slippery slope only goes one way.

This really crushes me you know, because I can feel my rationale sheer away under my feet, and I feel a need to apologise to people although I wasn’t there singing those filthy songs.

I feel sick because Collymore shouldn’t have to listen to that. Catholics shouldn’t have to listen to it. No-one should. The country these people live in should not need to be shamed this way.

Laws against those chants exist. It’s not like one has to be created to deal with this. It’s there already, on the statute books.

If it’s used, you know what? I will have no sympathy for those who end up jailed or banned from a football ground this evening.

I might not like the idea, or agree with it, but for once, tonight, as I feel this way, I won’t complain too bitterly. I am just tired of it.

Likewise with the SPFL. Their cowardly decision last week – and I made it quite clear that I agreed with it but not the motive behind it, which was to cover their own backsides – is most definitely what invited tonight, that and BT Sport’s corrupt decision to silence Stan Collymore, who used his own right to free speech to ask hard questions about this issue.

BT Sport’s commentary tonight – which I watched online; there is no question of me giving these people money, now or in the future – was utterly bereft of criticism or condemnation, even if their staff had wanted to offer some, which I very much doubt.

What’s happened to their colleague has made it abundantly clear where the organisation they work for stands.

Sectarian and racist abuse is acceptable. Commenting on it is not.

You can’t help but feel an opportunity was missed here, that they could have given Stan Collymore his platform and let him say what he had to.

See, I tend to believe that this does more good than any law ever could. If his suggestions had been taken seriously, and acted on, that BT Sport would refuse to show games involving the club until they confronted this matter, the fans they gave full license to this evening would have been singing to themselves.

BT Sport, like every other satellite channel, operates on an economic model that is built on two things; advertising revenues and subscriptions.

I strongly suspect that subscriptions will tank on the back of their treatment of Collymore, and they should.

But tonight, advertisers need to ask themselves serious questions too.

Laws aren’t needed here, when it comes down to it. Hard, financial consequences can change this instead. If the TV companies are content to show this stuff then advertisers should tell them they’ll not be associated with it.

Likewise the SPFL, who have expressed their own lack of interest in even condemning this behaviour far less following the law of the land.

The media has a role to play in this too, of course, but already they are indulging in their own favourite sport, the whatabouttery we’ve come to expect, with Jackson and others already tweeting about “both sets of fans.” It’s shameful.

Tonight was down to the fans of one club, and only one club, and it’s about time our hacks grew a set and reported what’s in front of them instead of attempting to hide behind the same old tired cobblers.

I really do feel crap tonight. That was a 90 minute hate fest, and although it shames one club, they’ve proved, long ago, that as long as the world remains silent about it they’ll carry on as if it never happened.

The problem is that they’ve never been properly held to account for displays like tonight and that is what has to change.

I say again, I am opposed to laws which criminalise free expression, but there are other ways to deal with this.

If our media did its job and reported the facts and nothing more – that tonight’s display was right out of the gutter – without fear, if they showed these people up for the dregs of humanity and for once confronted this as it exists, then I think we’d see changes.

If not, then yes, let’s go and look and what’s on the statute books … much as it makes my skin crawl to write those words.

Likewise, the SPFL. What are they going to do about it? That tonight … that was absolutely unconscionable. That went way beyond a few off-colour songs.

If sponsors decided, tomorrow, to withdraw their money because they don’t want to be associated with that – and if I were one of those sponsors I would do it without hesitation – what then?

For me, tonight I’m having a great deal of difficulty with the bedrock of everything I believe in. There are people living in my country and in my city who have no respect for the very rights I care about, because I realise that those rights come with responsibilities and those people have no sense of that.

I don’t want them criminalised, but what they did tonight is criminal, whether I agree with it or not. I don’t want rules created and bent to discipline them for that display, but those rules already exist, whether I like them, or even agree with them.

BT Sport would rather discipline one of its own staff for daring to call these people out.

The Scottish Government would rather criminalise political expression than tackle the real issues.

The SFA and the SPFL would rather it just went away on its own … but tonight that strategy exploded like an atom bomb.

Confront it or it’ll kill you … how can we interest people in our game when our game looks and sounds and stinks like this?

Tonight I can’t defend them. Tonight I won’t. If that makes me a hypocrite so be it. There are worse things to be tonight.

The gutters need cleaning out. Pure and simple.

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  • david says:

    Lets get something straight. first of all to blame one side of the old firm and not both is extremely ignorant of the facts and belief in a fantastical world. BOTH TEAMS HAVE MORONS BOTH SING BANNED SONGS. Why were they banned because obviously they had to be stopped in the opinion of people with different views. Thus restricting the views of the people who sing them and the choice in which way they express them.Freedom of speech for all i think not.Now a fact the song billy boys is not a sectarian song, you talk of how you justify YOUR songs by calling them political but dont recognise one of your cultures political party names when you hear it.Fenian is a collective name for a member of the nationalist irish party well known in Ireland as a supporter of home rule. I believe that would then make the billy boys song political as no mention of any religion is mentioned in it.FACT. NOW TO CELTIC FANS a well used daily name directed at any one who supports rangers or a member of the protestant faith. HUN.A name that cums from the fact that the protestant religion was largely started by a german monk called Martin Luther hence we are all german huns to yous.How sectarian is this or do you wish to sweep more facts about your own clubs faults under the carpet.SECTARIAN has many faces and coulours buy a mirror and have a right good look at yourselfs rather than as usual have more interest in rangers than the team you claim to support.

  • Steve says:

    Do you even realise how ironic that sounds? You don’t care what others find offensive but if it is something that offends you then it should be illegal? It is typical of celtic fans’ outlook – always offended but can’t see fault in their own actions.
    All offensive behaviour should be cut back on.
    Whether that is Rangers, Celtic, Hibs or Kilmarnock.

  • James Forrest says:

    Are you actually bereft of a brain?

    What Sevco fans sang at Starks Park is ALREADY ILLEGAL … full stop.

    No laws are required. They already exist.

    I think you are a stupid f@@@wit … that might offend you (or it might just ring true), but nevertheless hard lines. You have NO RIGHT in this country not to be offended … a lot of things offend me on a daily basis. Tory politicians for a start.

    Singing Irish songs might offend you, as seeing the flag might offend you, as people exercising their religious beliefs might offend you … TOO BAD. You are a BIGOT … that’s why you get offended, because deep inside you SOMETHING IS WRONG.

    What your fans did is RACISM and SECTARIAN … those things are not simply offensive … they are ILLEGAL ….

    You clearly have some trouble getting this … I can’t spell it out more clearly than that.

  • Steve says:

    Calm down Jamesy lad, you might have an aneurism!
    Just because something is legal doesn’t make it morally acceptable.
    If I am a bigot for feeling offended that a group of inbreds sing in support for an army that has killed lots of innocents that have absolutely no connection with our country, then I guess there must be a lot of bigots out there. Or maybe it is just you lot and your usual blinkered views that try and justify their actions with the fact that it’s “not illegal”.
    And yes, I am the one of supposed lower intelligence, lowering myself to insulting people on a board instead of having reasoned debate.
    Calm down James, I know you like to get yourself worked up about things that offend you 😉

  • naebdyspeshl says:

    my heart was bleedin about your quest for free of speach, what I couldn’t understand was that it was coming from someone who blocks anyone who disagrees with him, on any form of social media from twitter to his own blog.

    How does that work?

    • James Forrest says:

      Who blocked you? You see your post? I enjoy debate … when it’s real debate.

      A lot of you are incapable of it.

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