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Red-Robbo

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Posts posted by Red-Robbo

  1. 3 hours ago, Cowshed said:

    I posted that defacing a flag can be a hate crime.

     

    There is no case law where defacing a flag is a hate crime in the UK. However, under certain circumstances, say burning a union flag on the Cenotaph, such actions could be considered incitement to a breach of the peace and therefore be illegal.

    Putting different colours on a football shirt would not fall under this definition.

  2. 8 hours ago, Miah Dennehy said:

    Yes, I'm all up or an extra bank holiday :) It won't be long before a political party sees that as a vote winner and puts it in their manifesto. 

    Funnily enough there was some bearded chap who did have it in his manifesto not that long ago, but all the sort of "proper blokes" who define themselves as patriots didn’t vote for him. 😉

  3. 1 hour ago, Three Lions said:

    He doesnt know why England fans carry St Georges and thinks its recent!!! 

    Certainly isn't historic. I attended loads of England games in the 70s and can't remember seeing many of them then. Think it crept into terrace culture in the 80s.

    I have zero issue with them though. It totally makes sense that they'll be at England games

    Equally I don't have a problem with them not being on the shirt as lots of England's kits didn't carry flags in the past. The three lions - the FA's symbol - has been the one ever present. 

  4. 1 minute ago, Lewisdabaron said:

    I will stick to my 1988 & 1990 vintage shirts - when there was some testosterone about, but thanks. 
     

    But it was nice of you to model it for us Robbo. 

     

    Don't mistake BO for testosterone, mate. 

    • Haha 1
  5. Just now, ExiledAjax said:

    "David Seaman asked: “What’s next? Are they going to change the Three Lions to three cats?”"

    😂😂😂

    Seaman will be livid when he finds out Lions are actually cats.

    This whole thing is hilariously tinpot.

     

    On Radio 4, Shilton referred to "the red, white and blue of the England flag"  :facepalm:

    • Like 1
    • Haha 3
  6. 2 hours ago, MarcusX said:

     

    Anyway, saw loads of the new shirts around yesterday and both the England store and the Nike store were packed with huge queues, don’t think it’s been as unpopular as many would like to think.

     

    Nike have even brought out a special edition for the likes of Lewis and others worried that the flag has gone gay due to wokeness,,,

     

    May be an image of 1 person and text

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  7. 1 hour ago, W-S-M Seagull said:

    The original design was for it to be in the pride colours but the Fa vetoed that. 

    And rather than it being replaced with the proper flag they've come up with this which I just can't understand. 

    Having worked on a contract for a very large company involved in sportswear design, I know that design teams are always looking at ways to spin things and using the cuff colours used in '66 on this rather tucked away - can't say I ever noticed it during games - flag design is just the sort if thing they love coming up with and they justify their fees through such tinkering.

    I'm as traditionalist as the next man, but when you realise that having a small flag on the collar only began in 2002, I can't get worked up about this. Let's face it there wasn't a flag on the England kit in '66 nor in various other classic tournaments.  It's a modern imposition, so I don't care about it.

    Now, if they'd have ****** about with the Three Lions ...

     

    • Like 1
    • Facepalm 1
  8. 10 minutes ago, Roger Red Hat said:

     

     

     

    Myth busters: the first story about the flag is not supported by any historical evidence but seems to have arisen in the 20th Century.

    Just call me Mr Snopes.Com

    • Facepalm 1
  9. 2 hours ago, MarcusX said:

     

    I wasn’t too fussed about this originally, and tbh still don’t care about the flag on the shirt, but the fallout is fascinating and the hypocrisy truly bizarre.

     

     

    As exemplified by N Farage demanding Nike change the cross back to its original colours.

    Just a quick reminder of the flag Ukip used when he was leader...

    image.jpeg.1eea2e2edf719ecb710835129b91a8cf.jpeg

    • Like 7
  10. 44 minutes ago, glynriley said:

    Only by some of the loonies!!

    @LSNagain posted earlier in the thread that they didn’t like, straight away replies were “what’s your issue with it”? and “#triggered”. Seems clear to me those were posted to work an angle into putting a label on the original poster. 

     

     

    Fair enough, although I think some posters fixated on the colour of the cross on the back and suggested it was disrespectful or (in one case) illegal. :laugh:

    I haven't bought a replica kit for years as I don't think they do much for the more mature figure. 

  11. 2 minutes ago, glynriley said:

    When the simple truth is, not everyone likes the same things. 

     

    Yes, but let's remember why this became a topic of conversation in the first place. It was condemned not as a bit of graphic art but for being "woke". And you can like or dislike the kit - I'm personally not keen on anything with Nike ticks so prominent - but it manifestly isn't "woke". Unless people consider the 1966 England training camp as "woke". 

    • Like 1
    • Facepalm 1
  12. 18 minutes ago, Midred said:

    Would Nike have considered playing with the beloved stars and stripes? That would make for an interesting debate in this election year!

    The US kit doesn't feature the flag as such - and in fact most international kits don't - but they did wear this badge at the World Cup, which caused a minor meltdown from the usual suspects.

    U.S. Men's Soccer Team to Feature Rainbow Crest for Parts of Qatar World  Cup - WSJ

    • Like 1
    • Facepalm 1
  13. 5 minutes ago, And Its Smith said:

    Farage and Barton haven’t told people to be offended about other defaced flags yet so people are maybe waiting for that first 

    I don't think even those two pillocks care about how this minor feature on a football shirt looks. They made a fuss about it because they - and some of their short-sighted disciples - assumed the colours were chosen as some sort of homage to LGBTQ+ people.

    They now look stupid as it's been made clear why those particular colours were chosen, but it's embedded in the mindset of the kneejerk culture war frothers that they have to double down on everything and can never admit they've made a mistake - even when they obviously have. 

    • Like 2
  14. 4 minutes ago, Lewisdabaron said:

    Just a slight co-incidence its the flag in same style of the bisexual flag? 

    Except it isn't. For us a start that flag is three horizontal bars, not a cross. Also, the Nike design has red in it and a dark blue, neither of which are in the bisexual flag. The Nike design doesn't have pink either, which is in the bisexual flag.

    So, in short, the only thing it has in common with the bisexual flag is mid-blue and purple.  

     

    • Facepalm 1
  15. If they've bent the rules in the Championship it doesn't seem fair to benefit their Premier League rivals by docking them points in that division.

    Surely easier just to get them to forfeit some of their last games in the second tier. starting, oh I don't know, next Friday perhaps... :whistle2:

    • Like 1
  16. 1 minute ago, Tim Monaghan said:

    I didn't know that to be fair. Still, it makes no difference on my thoughts on it. I don't really care where the guy was from, but I do love my country. 

     

    He may not even have existed.  Interesting that in addition to England and six other countries, St George is also the patron saint of farmers, syphilis, sheep, lepers and boy scouts. Make of that what you will. ;)

  17. 2 minutes ago, Tim Monaghan said:

    Well, it might be a sh!te argument if I was actually arguing something 🧐. St. George was a Turk

     

    Well, not really, as Turks didn't live in what is now Turkey in the 1st Century. He was probably Greek speaking - you'll note Geogios is a very popular Greek name - but was actually born in a town now in Israel. Let's not go there...  :laugh:

    • Like 1
  18. 4 minutes ago, supercidered said:

    No, I wasn't going to quote that story or any other story. 

    If people want to find out how St George became the patron Saint of England. It's very easy to find.

    The simple answer is the Order of the Garter adopted St George in the 14th Century and thereafter he became associated with Royal events etc. But he wasn't the patron saint of England until 1552 when Edward IV made him it. I guess the feeling was having a King who'd been assassinated (Edmund) as patron saint sent out the wrong vibes in Tudor times!

    People associate it with the Knights Templar during the Crusades, but their symbol is a Maltese Cross not a "Greek Cross" as used in the flag of England.  The vast majority of Templars would've been French at any rate. France had approximately seven times the population of England during the 13th Century.

    None of this has anything to do with the Nike England shirt of course, but it's an interesting diversion, and may give pause for thought for those blokes who always turn up to England matches dressed as Genoese men at arms. For no apparent reason. :facepalm:

    • Like 2
  19. 53 minutes ago, supercidered said:

    It's a sh!te argument which usually gets banded about on or around St George's Day. If you don't know the story behind why St George is England's Patron Saint then perhaps you should.

    Any flag on any England Football kit should be as it is without any artistic licence required or needed.

     

    If you're going to quote the story about Genoa and Richard the Lionheart's fleet sheltering there, that is likely a myth. No contemporary account confirms that or indeed that "English knights"(most of whom would've been Gascons not English) ever wore the St George cross during the Crusades.  The first mention of English soldiers having a cross on their shields comes a century after the last Crusade, during the Baron's War and that was just a simple + not linked to St George.  St George didn't become the patron saint of England until 1552 (St Edmund had been that during Medieval times) and the St George flag wasn't used by English army and naval forces until the 17th Century.

    • Like 1
  20. 3 hours ago, Curr Avon said:

    Can you be outraged, retrospectively? Asking on behalf of Colin, from Portsmouth.

    Folk knows what all these cultural war warriors thought prior to 2002 when our shirts never featured a flag....

    • Like 1
  21. 1 hour ago, Open End Numb Legs said:

    I think you are mixing up knowing which way to vote with knowing when they will do it.

    Most people will have made up their mind already, but no one has ever mentioned to me about when. It just isn't a topic anyone is talking about, the reason being that we all know it has to happen, there is an end date.

    The opposition parties want an election ASAP because they know the economy is picking up after the damage of COVID, Truss, Putin and they know good news is bad for their votes.

    Because of any feel good factor lagging behind the economy, it is unlikely that news today of lower than expected inflation will help the Tories much.

    Apologies everyone, this is probably on the wrong thread.

    I'm not an opposition party but I want an election asap because the "good news: is still piss weak - and is tempered by other stuff the Tory press keep quiet, such as the most UK business closures since the World Financial crisis, and record debt levels, as weĺl as vastly more incoming red tape on imports from April. 

    I want competent people in charge, not shysters and offshore-based disaster capitalists.

    My last word on this thread on this.

    (However the fact remains, the timing of the election is a legitimate story that any news outlet would report on and, as it has to come soon, speculate over. The Kate stuff is meaningless fluff, as are all other royal stories. Mindless chewing gum for the mind for those easily distracted from real life)

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