Wednesday, 22 January 2014

For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?


I’ve been missing out on a lot of things of late. Firstly, the drink, as I’m on my usual dry January; it was very hard last Friday night, but I think I’m over the worst of the pangs now. Secondly; a whole load of gigs. As I type this on Wednesday 22nd January, it is with a heavy heart as work commitments mean I am unable to attend Mogwai at the Tyne Theatre tonight. Because I don’t finish until 9, I’d be arriving post gig for some post rock, so there’s no point in even thinking about it. Sadly, I’ve never seen Mogwai, nor have I ever had the privilege of seeing The Pop Group live, though I should have ticked them off my list at the Glasgow ABC, as well as enjoying Queens Park 2 Elgin City 0 in the afternoon, in the company of Professor of Renaissance Literature at Stratchclyde University and former Ward 34 bassist Jonathan Hope, on Saturday 18th January. Sadly, this wasn’t to be as my Uncle Harry, a great old fella, passed away last week and I’ve been struggling to fit everything I need to remember in my head, never mind everything I need to do in my life since then. Tough, tough times at the minute…  

As a result, I cried off and spent my Friday night exchanging emails with Roddy Doyle for a proposed interview in PUSH #10 and my Saturday, post Winstons Over 40s (we won 2-1 away to Horden Tin Pot Veterans and I set foot in a Conservative Club for the first time in my life; one that had a framed photo of the Durham NUM banner on the wall in the lounge as well) and in place of the Stan’s postponed game at Tow Law (rain, of course), at Benfield 3 Congleton Town 1 in the FA Vase, in the company of someone I knew who’d been a friend of Gordon Burn and someone else who’d been on Mastermind the night before specialising in the novels of David Peace. It’s a small world and getting smaller all the time.


Apparently The Pop Group were as dynamic as their last epoch defining gig in Glasgow in 1980. It is a loss I shall just have to bear with fortitude, as many of the choices I have made of late have been done with full awareness of their consequences. Take Monday 20th January as an instance; news that ESG, the reformed American all-female version of A Certain Ratio, were playing their first ever Newcastle gig after a near 25 year musical hiatus at Think Tank had intrigued me, but the proposed Glasgow weekend achieved primacy. When that went by the wayside, I thought again about ESG; those distant, guttural shards of brutal post No Wave funk, such as Moody really appealed, even if the £20 entry was something to be balked at. However, with The Pop Group gone and Mogwai an impossibility, this was my only chance at a gig this month. I didn’t take that chance.

Also, Newcastle United versus sunderland in the FA Youth Cup was moved from Tuesday afternoon at Blue Flames to 7pm on Monday night at SJP, which appealed as well. However, the news that NUFC Fans United were holding our first meeting of 2014 at the Irish Club meant that all bets were off. While the only, solid gold, immovable event that takes place each Monday is my 6 a side up the West Road between 6 and 7, I realised that of all these events, the one that I had to be at was NUFC Fans United, with the awareness also needed I had to drop off a couple of books and programmes at the David Peace scholar’s gaffe on my way home. The NUFC Fans United meeting finished around 8.35, but we didn’t make it in to SJP, which is a shame as Newcastle won 4-0 in front of a mightily impressive 3,501. Happily I did get to see some glum Mackems sulking their way back down the hill from the ground.



So, why did NUFC Fans United claim my attendance ahead of the other intriguing events the same night? ESG are brilliant and had taken 33 years to make it to Tyneside, while a Monday night game at SJP is generally a rare and mainly enjoyable treat. The fact is, my conscience told me that the long term future of Newcastle United, rather than the short term one as presented by the Juniors (let’s face it; however good these young’uns look, they all end up on free transfer once they’re 18 because of the utter inability of NUFC’s coaching staff to turn teenage prospects into professional footballers) or a trip through my musical past, however diverting that might be, was where my responsibility lay. This point was especially brought home to me by the knowledge that at 6pm on Wednesday 223nd January, Newcastle United Supporters’ Trust (NUST) are holding their AGM, which I’m also being forced to miss because of work commitments.
NUST have a current membership, or so I’ve been told by one of the officials of NUST in response to my direct question, that numbers 771. While that figure is considerably less than it was around 4 or 5 years ago, it is higher than it has been in the intervening period. I have no precise way of knowing exactly how this number compares to this time last year, though I suspect it has shown an appreciable rise, mainly on account of events from June to November 2013. From the reappointment of Joe Kinnear (or the departure of Chief Executive and corporate mine host Derek Llambias, if you are that way inclined) to the Time For Change march, superbly organised by Graeme Cansdale of the Mike Ashley Out Campaign, to the risible banning of NCJ Media from accessing Newcastle United press conferences, to the wholly understandable if unnecessary exclusion of NUST from the Fans’ Forum, for conduct that resulted in them being rightly excoriated by the Football Supporters’ Federation representative at their AGM, events have provided NUST with an opportunity to reanimate their reputation among the support and to lose the tag of anodyne, anonymous, ineffectual,  indolence that has been the touchstone of their non-performance over these past 4 years.

As a member of NUST, I am wholly sick of their utterly ineffectual inactivity and non-existent profile among the support. This is why I am going to stand for election to the NUST board and this is why I attended NUFC Fans United’s meeting on Monday evening, because the latter organisation offer, at this moment in time, the only realistic prospect of fans being listened to by other fans.

Yes, NUST is the only democratically elected organisation representing fans, but other than the crass, unprofessional and utterly unavoidable breach of protocol that saw NUST slung out of the Fans’ Forum, whatever some of the more excitable titles in the Baltic Publications portfolio may claim, I can’t recall NUST doing anything to engage with the support during the last year. Frankly, having an AGM as the sum total of annual, face to face engagement with members, rather than any meaningful dialogue with people who cough up an annual fee don’t forget, or making any realistic attempt to recruit more members and actually represent them, whether this be on a day to day basis by taking problems and concerns to the Fans’ Forum or, as I had (perhaps naively) hoped, acting as a crusading, democratic, accountable organisation that seeks to get Ashley OUT and 100% Fan Ownership IN (or 51% Fan Ownership as a transitional demand), is completely and utterly unacceptable.



Are the NUST board so removed from the ordinary supporter base that their inactivity demonstrates, in an unconscious impersonation of the Westwood and McKeague era that it has not occurred to them that the ordinary support isn’t satisfied with a remote, isolated, seemingly unaccountable and resolutely disengaged board of NUST that sees no need to talk to members? Or are they more like the Halls; messianic and dictatorial, completely opposed to any concept of two way communication? Frankly, I do not know the answer, as NUST have, since 2010, shown an utter disinclination to engage with NUST members and all other NUFC fans as a whole in my opinion. Perhaps I’m wrong in my analysis; if so, I apologise, but I’d like to see incontrovertible, phenomenological proof that my instincts are incorrect.

NUST has a brilliant, copper-bottomed constitution and a superb, defined structure, but it is moribund to the point of irrelevance; the inability to respond to the events of the second half of last year shows that, especially when one considers the circumstances provided them with a golden opportunity to breathe life back into the organisation. So, when the only supposedly democratically constituted fans’ organisation for Newcastle United supporters shows absolutely no inclination to represent its potential constituency in any meaningful way, the only thing to do is to find other vehicles for this, which is where NUFC Fans United comes in to fill the void.

NUFC Fans United has no membership; it has no constitution and, in that sense, it has no defined manifesto or philosophical creed. All that NUFC Fans United seeks to do is act as a conduit between supporters and the club. The fact that the Fans’ forum exists at all is down almost exclusively to the hard work of Steve Hastie from NUFC Fans United and Lee Marshall from the club, despite the relentless blackguarding the two of them endure on line and in social media from people who really ought to know better and from others who don’t know what they are talking about.

As pointed out in the last blog I wrote about Newcastle United, it was NUFC Fans United who sought to broker a peace between the disproportionate response of the club to the trust’s stupidity in breaching protocol after the initial meeting of the Fans’ forum. No thanks was offered by either side and no compromise was reached, but at least NUFC Fans United tried and that’s something NUST can never be accused of in the past few years.  However, the time has come for a change, which is why I intend to stand in the NUST board elections. If the Trust is to survive in any meaningful form, it needs to respond to events in a timely fashion and talk to the support. I am heartened by Chair Norman Watson’s words at the AGM, where he announced a desire to see NUST at the forefront of fan led protests.

However, as yet, they are only words and this is why I will be standing for election to the Trust board. I am no soi disant crypto Leninist messiah figure with a need for personal aggrandisement; I am an ordinary fan and I will be standing as a democratic, accountable supporter of the eventual aim of 100% Fan Ownership of Newcastle United and, if successful, I will do everything to try and ensure the Trust will listen to fans and respond democratically to the feelings of the support, whatever the democratic will of the support shows itself to be. Again, I have no dialectical fists of love to instil compliance and compel obedience; I recognise the validity of the opinions of every single Newcastle United fan. I recognise also that 771 members may be more than NUFC Fans United has, but it is a pitifully small number. We need to build a mass, accountable, democratic movement of supporters, led by the democratic will of fans not by a small, unrepresentative group of self-interested autodidacts, to shake off the chains of cynicism and inertia and fight to take back our great club. I would hope we can use NUST as the rallying point for our movement, but if future events and tactics prove this to be an unreformable organisation, then it will be time for NUFC Fans United to assume the legitimate role as the voice of all Newcastle united supporters. Time will show us the path to go down.

By the time this blog is on line, the NUST AGM will have been and gone. All I can hope for, speaking as a card carrying, rank and file member of NUST, is that the Trust will have made a firm commitment to shake off the robes of inertia and self-interest that have swaddled the organisation since the 2010 election results were announced. Resignations and retirements, the latter a constitutional necessity, must come and elections will surely follow; please follow me on Twitter  at @PayasoDeMierda to learn of my election campaign and please join both NUFC Fans United and NUST to help save our club.


Remember; where we finish in the league and who manages or plays for us under the current regime is utterly unimportant. We need Ashley OUT and 100% Fan Ownership IN, though I will accept 51% Fan Ownership as a transitional demand. As The Pop Group said, Where There’s A Will There Has Got To Be A Way….


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