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spudski

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28 minutes ago, spudski said:

What did you find interesting about the article that you didn't already know? 

Ask yourself what I did...what is the point of the article? 

It's obviously a leading article. It has no proof the ships were used in the slave trade, but has now put the idea in people's heads that they may have been. The ship isn't even a symbol of slavery. But the headline of the article states it now is. It's complete bollox. ????

No offence if you think otherwise, but surely you can see that? 

Please let's not make this a left or right thing...this isn't about politics, hopefully...this about an issue many people from all walks of life have concerns about. I'd have made the OP regardless of who wrote it. 

Abandon ship: does this symbol of slavery shame Manchester and its football clubs?

I found quite a lot interesting. It’s a long article, I don’t want to go through every bit, but the whole issue of an inland City with a ship on its coat of arms, the links between the cotton mills and slavery, why the bee is also such a symbol of Manchester, and a whole lot more. 

And this really isn’t intended as a go at your original post. I’m glad you posted it. I probably wouldn’t have found and read the article otherwise. All I’d question in that OP is whether the article really is “calling for….” - as I’ve said that’s not how I read it. It says that there are calls for…but also gives equal prominence to those who don’t share that view. 

Edit: PS The headline starts “does…..” and ends “?”. I agree though that the ‘this symbol of slavery’ is poorly worded. 

Edited by italian dave
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I'm a left leaning subscriber to the Guardian, but found the article very tenuous. Feels at times that the paper has a quota of politically correct articles to fulfill and this was written to that end. Next week there will be an expose of the lack of diversity within Bowls clubs. Not sure that these "stretch" article's really advance the debate.

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1 minute ago, spudski said:

Just to correct you RR. 

There are more slaves in the world right now, than ever traded during Colston's time. 

Still traded in markets. Still transported and taken from their homes. 

An estimated 50 million slaves. 1 in 200 people. 

And we bang on about the past and doing wrong. Yet it's happening worldwide now at bigger proportions ..but it's hardly headline news. 

https://www.euronews.com/2018/01/24/are-there-more-people-in-slavery-now-than-during-the-transatlantic-slave-trade-

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2019/feb/25/modern-slavery-trafficking-persons-one-in-200

I obviously wasn’t aware of the current scale of slavery - hence my ‘on a much smaller scale’. 
 

I wonder if our woke poster Silvio Dante is as unaware of the current scale of modern slavery as I am?

 

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2 hours ago, italian dave said:

Before piling in with the usual cries of outrage, it’s actually worth reading what I think is an interesting article. 

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/apr/19/abandon-ship-does-this-symbol-of-slavery-shame-manchester-and-its-football-clubs

The article also needs to be read in the context of The Guardian's ongoing 'Cotton Capital' series into the slave owning history of the founders of what was The Manchester Guardian.  The fascinating articles are available online Cotton Capital | The Guardian

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7 minutes ago, spudski said:

Just to correct you RR. 

There are more slaves in the world right now, than ever traded during Colston's time. 

Still traded in markets. Still transported and taken from their homes. 

An estimated 50 million slaves. 1 in 200 people. 

And we bang on about the past and doing wrong. Yet it's happening worldwide now at bigger proportions ..but it's hardly headline news. 

https://www.euronews.com/2018/01/24/are-there-more-people-in-slavery-now-than-during-the-transatlantic-slave-trade-

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2019/feb/25/modern-slavery-trafficking-persons-one-in-200

Indeed. And, just to spread the net of controversy even further, and closer to home, the UK government is about to remove legal protection from modern slavery for people trafficked to the UK. 

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39 minutes ago, Robbored said:

You could try spell his name correctly SD………..:cool2:

Colston was a man of his time. In the 16/17 centuries slave trading was perfectly normal and acceptable. It was worldwide trade carried out by many European and Middle Eastern countries and although far less visible and on a far a smaller scale its still happening today.

From the fortune that he made he ploughed millions (in todays money) into the city of his birth. He was a generous man.

These days attitudes towards slaving are very different - quite rightly so but that doesn’t mean that destroying the legacy of a man who died 300 years changes the historical facts.

Let sleeping dogs lie is my view

You’re really not very bright are you?

 

508EF592-BEB0-4196-85F2-2B22A3430517.jpeg

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24 minutes ago, Percy Pig said:

Considering the OP thinks we shouldn't talk about the past he doesn't half bang on about the past... ?

 

(Just some gentle ribbing, @spudski, please don't bite too hard!)

Talking about in correct context I'm all for Bob...the point of the OP was the leading context of the article that was poorly headlined, researched and written in a way that was just putting an idea in people's heads that is far from the truth. All good fella ?

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54 minutes ago, spudski said:

So would you pull down all the statues of Caesars in Rome mate? Or the Amphitheatre?

You’ll notice I didn’t say they should have pulled the statue down, just that now it was down it would make more impact in the round if left vacant, and that I don’t agree with celebrating slave traders.

Personally, I would have preferred it had it been kept up but there be information next to it informing both sides. It’s what national trust properties are doing now (which is being bemoaned by some) and it allows education.

The sad fact is that people wouldn’t have known about Colston as much without the action of the pulling down of the statue. I’m not sure the same applies to the Roman Empire.

 

 

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What about clubs whose mascot is symbolic of aggressive sea going types who raped and pillaged who were also intrinsically involved in the slave trade.
 

 Should this type of club be banned or would an apology and reparations suffice?

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2 minutes ago, Malago said:

What about clubs whose mascot is symbolic of aggressive sea going types who raped and pillaged who were also intrinsically involved in the slave trade.
 

 Should this type of club be banned or would an apology and reparations suffice?

In that instance, I think we could all agree that a complete ban, the appropriation and sale of all assets, and the erasure of all records and results connected with the club would be the appropriate action. 

 

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8 minutes ago, Silvio Dante said:

You’re really not very bright are you?

 

508EF592-BEB0-4196-85F2-2B22A3430517.jpeg

Explain Silvio why you think that I’m not very bright………..is it because I don’t agree with all the historical woke nonsense so therefore I must be an ignorant dimwit?………….:dunno:

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32 minutes ago, italian dave said:

I found quite a lot interesting. It’s a long article, I don’t want to go through every bit, but the whole issue of an inland City with a ship on its coat of arms, the links between the cotton mills and slavery, why the bee is also such a symbol of Manchester, and a whole lot more. 

And this really isn’t intended as a go at your original post. I’m glad you posted it. I probably wouldn’t have found and read the article otherwise. All I’d question in that OP is whether the article really is “calling for….” - as I’ve said that’s not how I read it. It says that there are calls for…but also gives equal prominence to those who don’t share that view. 

Edit: PS The headline starts “does…..” and ends “?”. I agree though that the ‘this symbol of slavery’ is poorly worded. 

Fair enough Dave. 

I agree poorly worded...but now it's out there, some will see the ship as a symbol of slavery. You now how some skim read. It's intended imo...an editor with no agenda would have corrected it. 

Manchester was once the third busiest shipping port in the UK.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Manchester#:~:text=The ship canal transformed Manchester,port in the United Kingdom. 

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3 minutes ago, luke_bristol said:

The Guardian was founded with the profits of slavery, and the Guardian chucked a few quid around to make that little unwelcome fact go away, so the clubs could probably do the same. 

The article mentions that and has a link to an article they published in the last few months about their history with the slave trade so I'm not quite sure that's true. The title of is literally says "How we uncovered the Guardian founders' links to slavery"

Chalk another person up for not reading the article though! Hah.

Edited by IAmNick
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1 minute ago, Robbored said:

Explain Silvio why you think that I’m not very bright………..is it because I don’t agree with all the historical woke nonsense so therefore I must be an ignorant dimwit?………….:dunno:

I could go on for hours, and it’s nothing to do with “woke” (and Tbf being aware of racism strikes me as a good thing but each to his own). In this case, the reason for the comment is pretty self evident if you read the thread, particularly the spelling of Colton/Colston, but I have no desire to make another thread all about you. 
 

It’s a bit needy and weird.

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2 minutes ago, spudski said:

Fair enough Dave. 

I agree poorly worded...but now it's out there, some will see the ship as a symbol of slavery. You now how some skim read. It's intended imo...an editor with no agenda would have corrected it. 

Manchester was once the third busiest shipping port in the UK.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Manchester#:~:text=The ship canal transformed Manchester,port in the United Kingdom. 

Off subject slightly (maybe no bad thing) but we drive over that canal to and from so many away games (not to mention other journeys) and often comment on the fact that you never ever see anything on it nowadays. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a single vessel. 

It’s hard to believe it was ever such a bustling waterway. - and also that it couldn’t serve a better purpose nowadays. 

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4 minutes ago, spudski said:

Fair enough Dave. 

I agree poorly worded...but now it's out there, some will see the ship as a symbol of slavery. You now how some skim read. It's intended imo...an editor with no agenda would have corrected it. 

Manchester was once the third busiest shipping port in the UK.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Manchester#:~:text=The ship canal transformed Manchester,port in the United Kingdom. 

But equally people will skim read / not read it at all and it'll become mental fuel to the "woke culture wars" that are going on in their heads.

That's just the nature of pretty much any article.

 

Amusingly, as an example, the article specifically mentions Manchester being the third busiest port. Why are you telling someone who has read it that, and then using wiki as a link rather than the actual article you're talking about (which you never even linked... and are also complaining about people skimming it)?

Have you read it...? ;) 

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8 minutes ago, Silvio Dante said:

You’ll notice I didn’t say they should have pulled the statue down, just that now it was down it would make more impact in the round if left vacant, and that I don’t agree with celebrating slave traders.

Personally, I would have preferred it had it been kept up but there be information next to it informing both sides. It’s what national trust properties are doing now (which is being bemoaned by some) and it allows education.

The sad fact is that people wouldn’t have known about Colston as much without the action of the pulling down of the statue. I’m not sure the same applies to the Roman Empire.

 

 

I agree a plaque should have been put in place educating people of his history...both good and bad. 

I don't agree with pulling down statues and changing names. As it's not ' celebrating' imo. It's just history...in the same way as the Roman Empire. 

Both had evil elements. Overpowering other nations, enslaving them, and using the money and labour force to build their own empires. 

The same goes in today. We are all part of it. It's not in your face as owning a slave...but we all buy clothing, products and food from companies that use 'slave labour forces'. 

The nearest ones to home in many cases are these ' pop up car washes'. 

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6 minutes ago, luke_bristol said:

The Guardian was founded with the profits of slavery, and the Guardian chucked a few quid around to make that little unwelcome fact go away, so the clubs could probably do the same. 

Exactly what the article is about, and a @Hxj has already mentioned, part of a series that focuses on precisely that.

So, no, they didn’t ‘chuck a few quid to make it go away’. Complete nonsense. 

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Just now, IAmNick said:

But equally people will skim read / not read it at all and it'll become mental fuel to the "woke culture wars" that are going on in their heads.

That's just the nature of pretty much any article.

 

Amusingly, as an example, the article specifically mentions Manchester being the third busiest port. Why are you telling someone who has read it that, and then using wiki as a link rather than the actual article you're talking about (which you never even linked... and are also complaining about people skimming it)?

Have you read it...? ;) 

I didn't link it as it was already linked previously. The Wiki gives greater depth to the article. 

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1 minute ago, spudski said:

The same goes in today. We are all part of it. It's not in your face as owning a slave...but we all buy clothing, products and food from companies that use 'slave labour forces'. 

 

I get what you're saying here, but the problem with this line of thinking is that it implies you can ONLY complain about something if you also become a hermit man who just lies down in the forest and dies, to have zero impact on the world or anyone else.

It's a way to shut down criticism and discussion to result in the status quo being maintained - and that line of thinking is intentional. Lots of people don't want the current system to be analysed and critiqued, so there's an opinion now that if you have a mobile phone or drive a car you can't say "Hey maybe we should look after the environment and treat certain people in our society a bit better". It's nonsense.

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4 minutes ago, italian dave said:

Off subject slightly (maybe no bad thing) but we drive over that canal to and from so many away games (not to mention other journeys) and often comment on the fact that you never ever see anything on it nowadays. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a single vessel. 

It’s hard to believe it was ever such a bustling waterway. - and also that it couldn’t serve a better purpose nowadays. 

It's a shame...the canals should be used more for transportation of good, to get rid of traffic on the roads. 

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As the Manchester ship canal wasn't completed until 1893 there probably weren't alot of slave ships directly connected with Manchester. However if the connection is the use of slaves in the production of cotton which was then sent to Manchester then perhaps we should be looking at alternative clothing materials?

Seriously though many civic buildings were built  and family wealth was created from  the slave trade and it's too easy as a diversion to concentrate on the likes of Bristol rather than admitting that cities and estates all over the country benefitted.

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2 minutes ago, IAmNick said:

I get what you're saying here, but the problem with this line of thinking is that it implies you can ONLY complain about something if you also become a hermit man who just lies down in the forest and dies, to have zero impact on the world or anyone else.

It's a way to shut down criticism and discussion to result in the status quo being maintained - and that line of thinking is intentional. Lots of people don't want the current system to be analysed and critiqued, so there's an opinion now that if you have a mobile phone or drive a car you can't say "Hey maybe we should look after the environment and treat certain people in our society a bit better". It's nonsense.

Knowledge is power. Learn from our mistakes, don't erase history, good or bad, and instead of trying to erase the past...educate...and focus on the present problems. Talk, don't erase, learn and don't make the same mistakes. That's how I see it. 

Sadly I don't think the world will ever change. 

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4 minutes ago, Midred said:

As the Manchester ship canal wasn't completed until 1893 there probably weren't alot of ships directly connected with Manchester. However if the connection is the use of slaves in the production of cotton which was then sent to Manchester then perhaps we should be looking at alternative clothing materials?

Seriously though many civic buildings were built  and family wealth was created from  the slave trade and it's too easy as a diversion to concentrate on the likes of Bristol rather than admitting that cities and estates all over the country benefitted.

The 'slave trade' was well over before the opening of the port. The cotton for the mills came from Egypt. 

The Mills were pretty much run like the slave trade. Instead using the poor to work long hours in slave like conditions. 

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4 minutes ago, IAmNick said:

I get what you're saying here, but the problem with this line of thinking is that it implies you can ONLY complain about something if you also become a hermit man who just lies down in the forest and dies, to have zero impact on the world or anyone else.

It's a way to shut down criticism and discussion to result in the status quo being maintained - and that line of thinking is intentional. Lots of people don't want the current system to be analysed and critiqued, so there's an opinion now that if you have a mobile phone or drive a car you can't say "Hey maybe we should look after the environment and treat certain people in our society a bit better". It's nonsense.

It’s a tough one, isn’t it? I agree with @spudski  on this, in principle, and in relation to the specific examples he gives.

We do have a genuine choice about something things. And when it comes to things like car washes and nail bars, well known as the sort of places that abuse people in that way, then just using them without any regard is unforgivable. 

And if you’re looking at a pair of jeans that costs £5 then that has to beg some pretty significant questions about how it was produced. 

But it’s a lot tougher when it comes to mobile phones……

But yes, I do also agree that it can be used to shut down or deliberately detract from debate - it’s about like the inevitable ‘have you offered to share your house with an asylum seeker’ post that appears in any debate on that subject. 

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1 minute ago, Midred said:

As the Manchester ship canal wasn't completed until 1893 there probably weren't alot of ships directly connected with Manchester. However if the connection is the use of slaves in the production of cotton which was then sent to Manchester then perhaps we should be looking at alternative clothing materials?

Seriously though many civic buildings were built  and family wealth was created from  the slave trade and it's too easy as a diversion to concentrate on the likes of Bristol rather than admitting that cities and estates all over the country benefitted.

 

The wealthy elite of Manchester - and the cotton-spinning areas of Lancashire in general, were among the few parts of Britain to have more sympathy with the Confederates than the Unionists in the American Civil War. 

However, that's f- all to do with football, and let's be honest, this whole thread is a bit weird. 

 

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Just now, spudski said:

Knowledge is power. Learn from our mistakes, don't erase history, good or bad, and instead of trying to erase the past...educate...and focus on the present problems. Talk, don't erase, learn and don't make the same mistakes. That's how I see it. 

Sadly I don't think the world will ever change. 

I broadly agree, it shouldn't be erased, but if there are things that make it appear we're celebrating awful parts of history or they cause people great distress to see regularly I think we should do what we can to remove or replace them. We have spaces for things like that - museums etc.

It's usually easy for people like me (white, male, middle class) to go "Oh it's not that big of a deal if we have X around is it? Don't erase it" because most of this kind of stuff hasn't affected me and never will. If I put myself in someone else's shoes then it's easier to see.

I don't think removing a statue of someone we learn to be awful is erasing history for example. That's part of history. It evolves as our understanding of it grows.

 

Thanks for the thread though, I hadn't seen the article. I thought it was interesting personally - although I'm don't think I agree with their question for the record, same as you!

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1 hour ago, LondonBristolian said:

There probably are hundreds of ways that things we think of as perfectly innocent have links to slavery. But what's wrong with knowing and understanding that history? 

Nothing, but trying to rewrite it won't work either as what's done is done, we just have to learn from our mistakes.

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1 hour ago, italian dave said:

And if you were related to Henry VIII the wouldn’t you be interested in reading something about that link?

I’m not quite sure why you’re getting so cross about me saying that an article in a newspaper is something I found interesting. You didn’t. Fair enough. 

As I’ve said above, I just didn’t read it as the ‘attack piece’ it’s being portrayed as, but as a fairly well balanced article on the subject. 

Not getting cross at all just a bit despairing at the way the world seems to be going, perhaps that's just my age but I'm sure there must be people a lot younger than me that wonder where this will all end.

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2 minutes ago, IAmNick said:

I broadly agree, it shouldn't be erased, but if there are things that make it appear we're celebrating awful parts of history or they cause people great distress to see regularly I think we should do what we can to remove or replace them. We have spaces for things like that - museums etc.

It's usually easy for people like me (white, male, middle class) to go "Oh it's not that big of a deal if we have X around is it? Don't erase it" because most of this kind of stuff hasn't affected me and never will. If I put myself in someone else's shoes then it's easier to see.

I don't think removing a statue of someone we learn to be awful is erasing history for example. That's part of history. It evolves as our understanding of it grows.

 

Thanks for the thread though, I hadn't seen the article. I thought it was interesting personally - although I'm don't think I agree with their question for the record, same as you!

Fair points. 

Perhaps it's the people who are easily offended by a statue or name who need to be re educated on how they should react to such things. 

Around the world, pretty much every statue, historic building, throughout cultures that built empires on overpowering other nations and enslaving them, still stand and remind everyone of how they were built. 

We don't wish to pull them down. 

No one is alive who endured the slave trade now. So why is anyone so offended that they feel the need to remove anything related to it?  The whole world can be seen as pretty much offensive from its past....and present. 

Funnily this whole episode of erasing will become part of history. People will look back and think WTF were they thinking. 

 

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6 minutes ago, pillred said:

Not getting cross at all just a bit despairing at the way the world seems to be going, perhaps that's just my age but I'm sure there must be people a lot younger than me that wonder where this will all end.

In the case of clubs' badges, it isn't. Just some suggestion from some bloke in an opinion piece. Not some campaign to diss ships!

There is one minor West Country third-tier (just) club though, who I do think should change their badge.

I have a suggestion for a new one:

image.jpeg.a46e6c658e18c6e6d11951bac981ca58.jpeg

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2 hours ago, lenred said:

Dont forget mascots!


We have an old Scrumpy cuddly toy I bought for my daughter, years back.  I found it in the dogs mouth yesterday - my daughter had given it to him as a toy. When I jokingly said to daughter and missus ‘no no he can’t have that - Scrumpy is a collectors item now’ they asked why.   I explained that we have had to have new mascots to be inclusive and then both of them cracked up at the ridiculousness of it.  Both are staunch feminists (rightly so) but even they can see how stupid things are becoming in certain areas. Its a bloody bird!  

Most concerning. Do you have any theories as to why City Cat, City Kitty or the Coldseal Pigs were similarly hounded out of the club?

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38 minutes ago, IAmNick said:

The article mentions that and has a link to an article they published in the last few months about their history with the slave trade so I'm not quite sure that's true. The title of is literally says "How we uncovered the Guardian founders' links to slavery"

Chalk another person up for not reading the article though! Hah.

That’s not what I meant, though I did phrase it ambiguously - the calls were to dissolve the Guardian, which is exactly what would be called for if the Daily Heil or Torygraph were in the same position. Instead the Guardian engage in some performative self flagellation and chuck a few quid around.

 

“Hah”, or whatever.

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42 minutes ago, italian dave said:

Exactly what the article is about, and a @Hxj has already mentioned, part of a series that focuses on precisely that.

So, no, they didn’t ‘chuck a few quid to make it go away’. Complete nonsense. 

Why don’t they dissolve the paper? Forever tainted by blood money.

 

E2A: the research isn’t a confession, it’s them digging trenches and  donning armour. Look how sorry we are (because we want to keep our jobs).

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10 minutes ago, spudski said:

Perhaps it's the people who are easily offended by a statue or name who need to be re educated on how they should react to such things. 

Around the world, pretty much every statue, historic building, throughout cultures that built empires on overpowering other nations and enslaving them, still stand and remind everyone of how they were built. 

We don't wish to pull them down. 

No one is alive who endured the slave trade now. So why is anyone so offended that they feel the need to remove anything related to it?  The whole world can be seen as pretty much offensive from its past....and present. 

Funnily this whole episode of erasing will become part of history. People will look back and think WTF were they thinking. 

 

Excellent post Spudski but unfortunately our resident woke SD won’t agree…….……….:cool2:

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17 minutes ago, spudski said:

Fair points. 

Perhaps it's the people who are easily offended by a statue or name who need to be re educated on how they should react to such things. 

Around the world, pretty much every statue, historic building, throughout cultures that built empires on overpowering other nations and enslaving them, still stand and remind everyone of how they were built. 

We don't wish to pull them down. 

No one is alive who endured the slave trade now. So why is anyone so offended that they feel the need to remove anything related to it?  The whole world can be seen as pretty much offensive from its past....and present. 

Funnily this whole episode of erasing will become part of history. People will look back and think WTF were they thinking. 

 

As you said 100% correctly before that people should learn from history instead of deleting it. 

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8 minutes ago, Andre_The_Giant said:

Most concerning. Do you have any theories as to why City Cat, City Kitty or the Coldseal Pigs were similarly hounded out of the club?

Fair point.  Therefore I hereby retract all previous statements made regards the possible reasoning for scrapping Scrumpy the Robin and will give said cuddly toy relic back to the dog ?

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16 minutes ago, spudski said:

Fair points. 

Perhaps it's the people who are easily offended by a statue or name who need to be re educated on how they should react to such things. 

Around the world, pretty much every statue, historic building, throughout cultures that built empires on overpowering other nations and enslaving them, still stand and remind everyone of how they were built. 

We don't wish to pull them down. 

No one is alive who endured the slave trade now. So why is anyone so offended that they feel the need to remove anything related to it?  The whole world can be seen as pretty much offensive from its past....and present. 

Funnily this whole episode of erasing will become part of history. People will look back and think WTF were they thinking. 

 

True, but one person's "easily offended" is another's legitimate concern. I expect a lot of the stuff we get up in arms about with football most people would say are us being easily offended when we're complaining about the club treating us as customers and not fans, fuming over some offhand comment Lansdown made in an interview, or the colour of a new shirt in the shop due to it's relation to other teams. It's important to us though, because of our personal association with it, just as these things are important to others.

I'm also not going to mention any by name, but surely you can think of events in history that nobody alive endured but you wouldn't want statues, badges, etc. publicly displayed for them?

 

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9 minutes ago, Robbored said:

Excellent post Spudski but unfortunately our resident woke SD won’t agree…….……….:cool2:

RR...let's not make this diversive and about a them and us scenario. 

Being offended by something doesn't need the word ' woke' attached to it. As soon as you quote that word, it gets people riled. Inclusivity and education are better. 

Many people are offended for different reasons. 

https://upjourney.com/why-are-people-so-easily-offended

This author in here video makes good points. 

https://time.com/5543441/stop-getting-offended/

 

 

 

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8 minutes ago, luke_bristol said:

Why don’t they dissolve the paper? Forever tainted by blood money.

 

Hmmm. Although the paper was founded in Manchester by cotton merchants who would have received some of their raw products from slave-owning nations, it was also a campaigner against slavery and welcomed its repeal in British colonies in 1837.

Really, it only became a national paper when CP Scott (a local lad from Bath) took over editorship and then ownership in late Victorian times.  Uniquely, for a British mainstream newspaper, it isn't owned by a multi-millionaire, but is supported by the Scott Trust, a fund set up by Scott's descendants and other supporters in 1936.

Interestingly, Scott wasn't the only Somerset newspaper founder. Cyril Pearson who founded the Daily Express was from Wookey.

 

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3 hours ago, lenred said:

Dont forget mascots!


We have an old Scrumpy cuddly toy I bought for my daughter, years back.  I found it in the dogs mouth yesterday - my daughter had given it to him as a toy. When I jokingly said to daughter and missus ‘no no he can’t have that - Scrumpy is a collectors item now’ they asked why.   I explained that we have had to have new mascots to be inclusive and then both of them cracked up at the ridiculousness of it.  Both are staunch feminists (rightly so) but even they can see how stupid things are becoming in certain areas. Its a bloody bird!  

Oi !!!

You can't say bird !!!

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4 minutes ago, spudski said:

RR...let's not make this diversive and about a them and us scenario

I think that those who are woke fanatics are nothing more than political activists who go out of their way to irritate the rest of us - us that are too thick to understand whatever it is they’re protesting about.The recent incident was when some bloke spilt orange powder on a snooker table live on tv wearing a T shirt with whatever he was protesting about written on it.

On the other table a woman tried to glue herself to the table but was stopped by security. 

Other social warriors sitting and blocking the M25, others holding up the traffic in Bristol for some other protest.

All they’re doing is pissing off everyone else and achieving nothing.

If they want to change things then become a MP and get into government.

 

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28 minutes ago, Robbored said:

Of course it isn’t easy but the best way to effect change 

But an highly unlikely way to effect change. 650 MPs in 67 million people.

Clearly all the actions the Just Stop Oil and other groups have done have made an effect, as you've discussed them on here.

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3 hours ago, italian dave said:

Indeed. And, just to spread the net of controversy even further, and closer to home, the UK government is about to remove legal protection from modern slavery for people trafficked to the UK. 

People who have paid thousands of pounds to the traffickers and then announce themselves as refugees. Again we live in a democracy and IMO the majority do not want their hard earned tax used to put these people in 4 star hotels. Perhaps we should have an opt in system. If you want to house these people in luxury, give them access to the NHS, provide translators at every government department, pay benefits and then repeat when their families join them, opt in, double your tax (if you pay any)  and pay for it.

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1 hour ago, Robbored said:

Of course it isn’t easy but the best way to effect change 

 

Not really, pal.

Weekends off, paid holidays, the NHS, non-landowners' right to vote, freedom from religious tythes, the right to join a union, the right to a fair trial, pensions, a representative democracy, contraception rights etc etc etc....

All things that you can enjoy, won by campaigns undertaken, at least initially, outside of Parliament.

 

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13 minutes ago, robinforlife2 said:

I like her. Speaks with passion, I wish politicians had her backbone. 

She speaks passionately and with the naivety of youth. I thought JRM was very patient with her extreme way of expressing her views. 

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6 hours ago, Clutton Caveman said:

OMG, how can we take events in history and judge them by todays standards. At that time half of the Royal Navy crews woke on on board with the kings shilling in their hand having been knocked over the head and brought on board after a heavy night out. In Africa, Egypt and ancient Greece slavery was rife, way before what we see as the slave trade. The past is the past, we cannot change it and we don't have to be ashamed for what our ancestors did. We sent kids up chimneys but are we now saying that Chimney sweep companies should be punished.

True but what was the jolly Roger all about?

 

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56 minutes ago, Clutton Caveman said:

People who have paid thousands of pounds to the traffickers and then announce themselves as refugees. Again we live in a democracy and IMO the majority do not want their hard earned tax used to put these people in 4 star hotels. Perhaps we should have an opt in system. If you want to house these people in luxury, give them access to the NHS, provide translators at every government department, pay benefits and then repeat when their families join them, opt in, double your tax (if you pay any)  and pay for it.

I’ve no problem with people who aren’t genuine refugees being sent away. But the point I was trying to make is that genuine refugees, and specifically genuine victims of modern slavery, will be sent packing without having any opportunity to make their case. We’ll be refusing genuine victims of slavery any protection. Is that right?

”These people” aren’t housed in luxury, and the reason we run up such massive bills is that the Home Office chooses (some would argue deliberately) to not assess their applications properly and promptly. And to keep them in abeyance for months or even years. Those costs are on our government, not asylum seekers.

Once they’ve been assessed and are genuine then would I be prepared to have my tax bill adjusted to pay for them? Very definitely. There are various ways of calculating the net cost to the country so different studies come up with different conclusions. Some calculate a net benefit to the economy - so I’d be quids in there, my taxes would go down. But even the ones that calculate a net cost suggest a very small one - one that would work out to no more than a few ££s on my bill. 

Plus, at the end of the day, they’ll be the people providing my health and social care when I need it and they’ll be the people paying the taxes to pay for it. 

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20 hours ago, miser said:

I'm a left leaning subscriber to the Guardian, but found the article very tenuous. Feels at times that the paper has a quota of politically correct articles to fulfill and this was written to that end. Next week there will be an expose of the lack of diversity within Bowls clubs. Not sure that these "stretch" article's really advance the debate.

Now you've done it!

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