I’m not sure if it’s the same at all clubs, but fans of
Newcastle United simply can’t deal with international breaks; forced inactivity
turns the support in to ADHD sufferers that have discarded their Ritalin
prescriptions, preferring instead to dabble with heavy doses of psilocybin.
Consequently, the pregnant non-competitive pause between the Villa game on 2nd
September and the Everton fixture 15 days later saw a tidal wave of
preposterous bilge on social media that bore the scantest passing resemblance
to reality. According to the 140 character Schopenhauers, Ba, Ben Arfa, Cabaye,
Cisse and Tiote were all for the off in January, with season-long injury
victims Colo and Krul also heading for the exits come next May when the club
would no doubt have been relegated; all the cash raised by the big money
departures would be going in to Ashley’s pockets of course, to help him fund
his buyout of NewHuns. Just as the paint pots and marked pens were being primed
for more bed sheet bravado, the truth came out; basically, Ba was unhappy at
being left on the bench against Everton. He said this after coming off the
bench and scoring the two goals, allied to the kind of fortunate decisions big
clubs like us get from the officials, which got us a point. End of story.
While remarking that Newcastle United’s foolhardy policy of
parsimony in the transfer market over the summer has rendered the Europa League
more of an encumbrance than a joy, as we’ll be sending out the likes of Danny
Gosling to represent the club on the European stage out of necessity rather
than choice, bearing in mind the pressure placed on our small squad by injuries
to Colo, Krul, Tiote and (I feel almost embarrassed to type his name) Simpson,
the only other Newcastle United story over the past fortnight was the reserve
derby. It ended 2-2, there were 1,800 there, mainly below the ages of 16, all
housed in the East Stand. At full time, buses 12, 21, 39 & 40 must have
been completely empty as the West End and East End Year 10 lads took it to the
50 fare-dodging Mackem charvas, who promptly ran away through Leazes Park when
the volume cranked up; strange how intimidating singing can be.
Of course, a rather more important story was how ignoring a proffered
hand can be seen as an inflammatory gesture. At the QPR v Chelsea game, Anton
Ferdinand pointedly refused to shake the loathsome John Terry’s hand, nor that
of the equally contemptible Ashley Cole, in relation to Terry’s utter lack of
contrition for his self-confessed racist abuse of Ferdinand last season in the
same game. Disgracefully, it is now seen by sections of the media, and among
bovine fans who seem content to be led by the nose by Talksport and tabloid
loudmouths, that Ferdinand is the one to blame for the continuation of this
apparent feud. What a terrible rewriting of the facts; what an atrocious red
herring. This situation was started by Terry’s ignorant, abusive, foulmouthed
comments in the first place; the legal process may have ended, but the FA has
yet to act. Presumably JT’s brief has told him not to apologise to Ferdinand
publicly, to avoid any admission of guilt before a disciplinary tribunal sits.
As a result, Anton Ferdinand has still not seen justice done. Once Terry’s case
has been heard and the man finally shows contrition for and understanding of
the wrong in his actions we may be able to move on. However, if Ferdinand still
chooses not to shake Terry’s hand, and if the Premier League then uses this as
a reason to dispense with this farcical pre match ritual, then I’ll be pleased.
Frankly, if you want to shake hands, then perhaps you should consider joining
the Freemasons; if you do, you can meet loads of retired and serving police
officers. Perhaps you could ask them their take on the recent Hillsborough
revelations, which have been the real football story over the past few weeks.
The news that incompetence and complacent avarice at the
heart of the English domestic game was the root cause of the Hillsborough
disaster and appalling police tactics on the day itself the main contributory
factor as regards the scale of the tragedy, bearing in mind the complete
contempt and outright hostility with which all football fans, regardless of
club, social class or social demographic, were viewed by the entire ruling
sectors of society, will come as absolute no surprise to anyone who has the slightest insight in to
the nature of British society during the Thatcher Years. You don’t need to have
been a regular matchgoer, or even to have lived through the era, though
obviously both of those things are relevant in terms of the insight they give
to the prevailing social conditions of the time, to understand the brutal,
repressive nature of the Police State that Britain was during the 1980s; a
cursory, dispassionate appraisal of the legislation passed during this period,
allied to the outpourings of pro-Government propaganda on television and in the
press, shows exactly how hard it was to assert individuality during that era. Orwell’s
image of the boot heel repeatedly stamping on a human face was as much a
literal fact as a metaphorical image in the year of 1984.
From the Brixton Riots of 1981, to the South Atlantic
imperialist adventure in the Malvinas in 82, to the decade long utter
dismantling of manufacturing industry and the attendant social problems caused
by the lumpenization of the British working classes that blight cities
throughout the land to this day, the Thatcher agenda of reverse class war is
evident from day 1; nothing sums up this repulsive ideology of brutalising
hatred more than the Miners’ Strike of 1984/1985. This tragic defeat cut deep
wounds in to the social fabric of mining communities throughout the land; in
parts of South Yorkshire these wounds still have not healed. My ex-wife is from
Barnsley; her best friend from school married a miner from South Elmshall. When
his pit shut in 93, in the second wave of Hesletine-inspired cuts, he joined
the police force. From that day onwards, his family refused to speak to him,
using a single word by means of explanation for their actions; Orgreave. Who
can really blame them?
Don’t just take my word for it, read David Peace’s
mesmerising, brilliant fictional retelling of Governmental malfeasance and the
tragic impact it had on the lives of ordinary, dignified working class lives in
GB84.
Once you’ve read that book, you’ll be prepared for the soon come revelations
that deceit, corruption and the vile manipulation of a complaint media by the
forces of social control were involved in the shameful absolving of blame of
South Yorkshire Constabulary in the Hillsborough disaster. The bastards may
have got away with it for 23 years, but the facts will out and they will show
that the Government fixed it for the Police to get off scot free in the
aftermath of 96 tragic, preventable deaths, as a way of saying thanks to SYP
for ensuring the Miners’ Strike failed and ensuring that the boys in blue would
continue to act as state condoned shock troops, hell-bent on social repression
and drunk on power.
Remember; 96 innocent people died at a football match. That should
never happen. Even at the time, the newly-released Hillsborough papers, made
available on the day that the contemptible Michael Owen tweeted “Big thanks to
the Police” after Cheshire plod had apprehended a trespasser at his racing
stables, show the admission at the time that 41 lives, at a conservative
estimate, could have been saved were it not for police tactics. These tactics
may be seen, and to an extent excused, as being merely incompetent, but that is
wrong. The actions of SYP were actually based on the prevailing attitude of the
ruling elite that regarded all fans as potential criminals and an enemy to be
confronted and tamed by any means necessary. A new inquest, allowing for
evidence beyond the farcically imposed cut off point off 3.15, must follow and,
though I’m not holding my breath, proper justice must be seen to be served by a
series of court cases against those involved in the disaster and subsequent
cover-up. However, bearing in mind the supine, obsequious nature of the CPS
when required to take on the establishment, at best we may be looking at a few sacrificial
lambs, hauloed up to be given suspended sentences, mainly on account of the
fact they’ve gone off message from the wall of silent deceit and the closing of
the thin blue line in obfuscatory contempt. Witness the Head of West Yorkshire
Police, who was on duty that fateful day, stating last week “Fans’ behaviour … made
the job of the police, in the crush outside Leppings Lane turnstiles, harder
than it needed to be.” The blame is still being heaped on the innocent and the
dead and that truly sickens me.
At the time of the disaster, the ruling class attitude of
repression and contempt was as pervasive as it was effective, both tactically
and ideologically. The day of Hillsborough, I was watching Newcastle lose 1-0
to a Paul Davis penalty against Arsenal at Highbury; they’d be champions and we’d
finish bottom. In a ground where the facilities knocked spots off the crumbling
concrete and rusting girders I was used to, stewards treated away fans with
dignity and decency; unlike the hideous crushes and appalling views of White
Hart Lane, or air of impending violence that hung over Stamford Bridge like
noxious cigar smoke, Highbury was a decent place to watch a game of football.
We still lost. Nick Hornby writes brilliantly about the day and the kneejerk
reaction of fans in Fever Pitch. I hold my hand up as guilty as the rest in
assuming, when I heard the news of the disaster, that “Scouse bastards” had
gone on the rampage and caused an abandonment. Basically, the media stereotype
of football hooligans permeated the consciousness of other football fans,
giving an indication as the effectiveness of the state propaganda machine. There
is no better example of false consciousness prevalent among ordinary fans than
the anti-Liverpool comments I heard inside and outside of Highbury that day.
That said, all of us learned very quickly that we’d made terrible false
assumptions. Don’t blame us; blame hegemony, as wielded by the Thatcher state
apparatus. Divide and rule was their mantra and their casus belli.
I was in London that weekend for a gig; Dinosaur Jr in
Kentish Town, staying with some mates who simply didn’t do football. Attired in
bike jacket, Butthole Surfers t-shirt, tartan lumberjack shirt, split-knee 501s
and paint-spattered 7 hole DMs, it was fair to say I was at variance to the
football casual fashions of the day. Indeed, I didn’t look like a football fan
at all, which enabled me to blend in with ease as I made my way from Highbury
back towards Finsbury Park and the pre-gig meet up in The World’s End pub on
Upper Tollington Park. All the way up, I eavesdropped on conversations about
the goings-on at Hillsboorugh and to those carrying transistors tuned to Sports
Report, as the news from Sheffield unfolded. A sense of unease, mingled with
guilt, that turned to shock, horror and eventually boiling anger, as further
revelations about the day emerged; it wasn’t “Scouse bastards” to blame at all;
it was “Tory bastards.” 23 years on, it is still the “Tory bastards” we must
blame. Strangely, I didn’t hear a single word about the disaster at the gig; in
those days, music and football were different worlds. Mind, I’d still contend
that arena gigs of landfill indie that many fans seem to consider the cutting
edge of popular culture are as contemptible as the Luther Vandross and Gloria
Estefan soundtrack 80s footballers seemed addicted to.
Despite the poisonous lies spread by Murdoch’s minions in
the immediate aftermath, the real truth was to be found in the samizdat
accounts of supporter zeitgeist in the fanzine movement. These days When
Saturday Comes may be a toothless billet
doux for AFC Wimbledon, but back then, it was a crusading mouthpiece for the
articulate disenfranchised. WSC was clear about Hillsborough;
this was not our fault, it was the fault of the authorities who’d treat us like
cattle for so many years. Sadly, the events of 15th April 1989 meant
so many of our fellow supporters were lambs to the slaughter.
Good stuff comrade.
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