I guess when you are in the doldrums you will grab at just about anything that offers you some brief respite from your pain and suffering. Most of us take pills. But when the pain is psychic pain, when, for example, it’s the pain of losing trophies you thought were in your grasp or when you find out your club’s football stadium won’t be ready for the start of the new campaign, what exactly do you take to make the hurt of that stuff go away?
Over on the Ibrox fan forums, they’ve spent the last week or two gloating over the fate of the Scottish national football team. I saw a headline today on the worst website in the county, Football Scotland, about how they were “furious” with Callum McGregor over something or another that he had done whilst on international duty, and I thought “why even bother?” Most of them don’t care about the national team, as their conduct on the forums makes clear.
The idea that they are angry because the national team hasn’t qualified is ridiculous. Or it’s just another excuse for them to pour out their bile. Since this tournament started they’ve been directing it at Steve Clarke, the SFA and, let’s be honest, the country itself, with many of them openly boasting about how they intended to support England anyway.
So they can spare us the mock frustration over the team not qualifying for the next round. Those of us who do care – and I know I don’t speak for everyone in Celtic cyberspace here, as one blogger made clear today with an attack on Celtic fans supporting Scotland which could have come off Follow Follow itself – are already pissed off enough. The last thing any of us can be bothered with are those who are pretending to be for their own selfish ends.
I have gone through spells of being angry enough at the SFA not to want Scotland to do well. But in the end, I always “come home”, I always remember that Scotland is my national team, that it’s the where I’m from, that it’s a country I am care deeply about.
I know we have troubles here, but I am a devoted patriot, and member of the 45%, and I am those things because there is a lot to love about this land and a lot to be proud of … and the things I most love and I am most proud of are amongst the reasons that our enemies hate this country, the one many of them were born in.
Almost everything about their support is warped. It should be no surprise that they have an acute identity crisis about their nationhood; it’s one that I do not share. I am tired of the fact that I have to share a country with people who hate it, and me, but that they tie these things together in their heads is the proof of how put upon they feel.
Rather than accept that they just aren’t as important, or as big, or as strong or as powerful as they once thought they were – back when their first club was fully funded by a bank that was way too close to Murray for its own good – they have convinced themselves that they are in their current position because a gigantic conspiracy is arrayed against them, at the heart of which is the SNP and the independence movement and thus, in a sense, Scotland itself.
So they don’t want Scotland to win, in much the same way as some of us are in the Anyone But England camp. Curiously, one of the reasons so many of us feel that way is that the England camp now includes them and a lot of goonish clowns just like them. Their own sense of identity is just as crazily skewed; they all have a sense of themselves as British first.
When those in their support cheer on England what they and some of that nation’s supporters are actually doing is celebrating Britishness, and a time when an increasing number of folks across all three countries that make up the union are rejecting that concept.
Part of that rejection brings forth, at last, a new strain of Englishness, one which is about civic responsibility, compassion for other people, an internationalist outlook and a rejection of the creeping ideology of the right, as expressed by Farage and others … and because of this one which seeks a new, and better, relationship with its neighbours.
And it’s at this precise moment that a large and growing section of the Ibrox support starts to cleave ever tighter to its perverse “British” identity. Well, that’s for them to do … but you would think that at the present time they have more to worry about than how Scotland is doing. But in this week of dreadful news for them, and the near certainty of worse to come on that front, they have to find something to fill them with good cheer and evidently this is it.
You could not make that up.
Britannia’s Huns indeed.
The Tribute Act could play at Wembuley, Stamford Bridge or even Milwall. They would be ever so welcomed there.
They truly are the strangest and weirdest lot (though I’m certainly not stereotyping them all like that and there are some Sevco fans around these shores – not The Sevco Hun variety – who genuinely are sorry to see Scotland outta Euro 2024)…
But dip into their forums and yep there are a significant amount of them who truly do hate Scotland and would be as happy as a pig in shit in some ultra right wing ghetto of Northern England…
They’d be well at home there but the usual clarion call wouldn’t be long in coming to the fore with them…
I well remember the vast cheering and europhia that greeted the first Brexit result when Sunderland declared leave The EU in The brexit referendum…
By fcuk – These people soon went begging cap in hand demanding ‘special status’ when Nissan threatened to walk away and take thousands of well paid jobs with them along on their merry way…
Just people that were simple and easily led by that odious wretch Farage and doubtless his army of right wing media lackeys –
But they had no morals after their stupidity – And Sevco Hun fans most definitely will never have either…
They are NOT WELL LIKED in fact they are UNIVERSALLY DISLIKED by a significant amount of the supporters of every other senior club in Scotland (perhaps with the exception of Falkirk and Airdrie United supporters) –
Changed days indeed in Bonnie Scotland and long may the tsunami flood against them for their bloody idiotic ideological stances in their daft wee centuries old bubble !
Your ‘piece’ reminded me of the only thing I found funny on Brexit, James.
(How Brexit was achieved is a scandalous affront to democracy but that’s for another time.)
A load of uber-staunch, British huns living (in exile) on one of the ‘Costas’ did their drinking in a pub decked out like the Louden Tavern but with a few more Butcher’s Aprons added for ‘good’ measure. Even the pool table was staunchly blue baize.
Oh, how they boasted about voting FOR Brexit and how they just loved their wee hun Spanish pub. Just like home but with regular sunshine.
Well, they got their Brexit and were then, all teary-eyed, swiftly deported by the Spanish who tolerated but intensely disliked them……just needed an excuse really……Brexit, ya beauty. Ha-fukkin-Ha-Ha. There’s something about ‘them’ that makes you gloat at their pain. They’re utter scum, that’s what.
Student pee TicToc! Get a job?
It’s the big f@t, red faced, baldy eejits you see on holiday with the Hun tatts and the UK shorts to their knees. An affront to our country.
It’s no wonder the Spanish don’t want their money.
What the huns should be focusing on, is that none of their players can get a place in a very average Scotland team. In fact, they should be deeply embarrassed about that. Their pre-liquidated club always managed to get players playing for Scotland, but the tribute act fail miserably in that respect, and is that not possibly the real reason they have withdrawn their support for the National team, the fact that their new club are too mediocre to be able contribute to the overall Scottish International effort.
This sickness coming from Ibrox has been manifest for a number of years, hatred for the
Independence movement. Anything that comes from the SNP. Bigotry and anger.is their DEFAULT ,to the point of denial of their Scottish Psyche. England doesn’t care about their strange behaviour, or understand it….who really does.