Quote from: dave.woodhall on Today at 05:49:40 PMYou posted since then, begging for tickets. But you never tell lies.I think a lot of this is just bitterness and an old man shouting at the clouds. Yes - in the olden days, if something happened at Villa, the world and its wife wanted to hear your thoughts. Now nobody cares what any of us think. The club is global, no one person can just call the CEO and have a chat like the old days, and organisations like ours proliferate in a DEI friendly era. Everyone has a say through social media and phone ins. But nobody’s say means anything. Your access to the big dogs and owners has presumably gone, as fanzines and forums in 2025 are sadly as relevant as the Boer War. But yeah, blame Jews innit. Bloody Jewish Villans causing all these problems. Over and out
You posted since then, begging for tickets. But you never tell lies.
I can't help but think that someone that was press secretary for the Israeli embassy is only ever going to see one side of the story and think everyone else is the baddie.
Edited to include the quote.Quote from: eliotpollak on Today at 03:38:15 PMQuote from: Dave on Today at 03:33:41 PMQuote from: eliotpollak on Today at 03:30:16 PMAnd that the police statement did not refer to any trouble they would be instigating, only their safety. So I’m not saying that, the police are. I've read it twice now, and don't see where it says that. It does clearly say though that it's because of what happened at a previous Maccabi match.QuoteWest Midlands Police has a strong track record of successfully policing football matches and other high-risk public events.We are committed to delivering fair and impartial policing, while balancing the public’s right to protest with our duty to ensure public safety.Following a thorough assessment, we have classified the upcoming Aston Villa vs Maccabi Tel-Aviv fixture as high risk.We have actively engaged with a wide range of local partners and community representatives in preparation for this fixture, and continue to participate in the Safety Advisory Group.While the Safety Certificate is issued by Birmingham City Council, West Midlands Police supports the decision to prohibit away supporters from attending.This decision is based on current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offences that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam.Based on our professional judgement, we believe this measure will help mitigate risks to public safety.We remain steadfast in our support all affected communities, and reaffirm our zero-tolerance stance on hate crime in all its forms.The second paragraph is key. ‘Balance the right to protest with public safety’. Who will be protesting. So whose safety is at risk?When the same phrase was used to ban the UKIP or whatever they’re called march in Tower Hamlets tomorrow, whose safety was at risk. It wasn’t the marchers. You might want to have a little think about the answer to the question you posed at the end there.
Quote from: Dave on Today at 03:33:41 PMQuote from: eliotpollak on Today at 03:30:16 PMAnd that the police statement did not refer to any trouble they would be instigating, only their safety. So I’m not saying that, the police are. I've read it twice now, and don't see where it says that. It does clearly say though that it's because of what happened at a previous Maccabi match.QuoteWest Midlands Police has a strong track record of successfully policing football matches and other high-risk public events.We are committed to delivering fair and impartial policing, while balancing the public’s right to protest with our duty to ensure public safety.Following a thorough assessment, we have classified the upcoming Aston Villa vs Maccabi Tel-Aviv fixture as high risk.We have actively engaged with a wide range of local partners and community representatives in preparation for this fixture, and continue to participate in the Safety Advisory Group.While the Safety Certificate is issued by Birmingham City Council, West Midlands Police supports the decision to prohibit away supporters from attending.This decision is based on current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offences that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam.Based on our professional judgement, we believe this measure will help mitigate risks to public safety.We remain steadfast in our support all affected communities, and reaffirm our zero-tolerance stance on hate crime in all its forms.The second paragraph is key. ‘Balance the right to protest with public safety’. Who will be protesting. So whose safety is at risk?When the same phrase was used to ban the UKIP or whatever they’re called march in Tower Hamlets tomorrow, whose safety was at risk. It wasn’t the marchers.
Quote from: eliotpollak on Today at 03:30:16 PMAnd that the police statement did not refer to any trouble they would be instigating, only their safety. So I’m not saying that, the police are. I've read it twice now, and don't see where it says that. It does clearly say though that it's because of what happened at a previous Maccabi match.QuoteWest Midlands Police has a strong track record of successfully policing football matches and other high-risk public events.We are committed to delivering fair and impartial policing, while balancing the public’s right to protest with our duty to ensure public safety.Following a thorough assessment, we have classified the upcoming Aston Villa vs Maccabi Tel-Aviv fixture as high risk.We have actively engaged with a wide range of local partners and community representatives in preparation for this fixture, and continue to participate in the Safety Advisory Group.While the Safety Certificate is issued by Birmingham City Council, West Midlands Police supports the decision to prohibit away supporters from attending.This decision is based on current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offences that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam.Based on our professional judgement, we believe this measure will help mitigate risks to public safety.We remain steadfast in our support all affected communities, and reaffirm our zero-tolerance stance on hate crime in all its forms.
And that the police statement did not refer to any trouble they would be instigating, only their safety. So I’m not saying that, the police are.
West Midlands Police has a strong track record of successfully policing football matches and other high-risk public events.We are committed to delivering fair and impartial policing, while balancing the public’s right to protest with our duty to ensure public safety.Following a thorough assessment, we have classified the upcoming Aston Villa vs Maccabi Tel-Aviv fixture as high risk.We have actively engaged with a wide range of local partners and community representatives in preparation for this fixture, and continue to participate in the Safety Advisory Group.While the Safety Certificate is issued by Birmingham City Council, West Midlands Police supports the decision to prohibit away supporters from attending.This decision is based on current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offences that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam.Based on our professional judgement, we believe this measure will help mitigate risks to public safety.We remain steadfast in our support all affected communities, and reaffirm our zero-tolerance stance on hate crime in all its forms.
Quote from: eliotpollak on Today at 05:56:06 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on Today at 05:49:40 PMYou posted since then, begging for tickets. But you never tell lies.I think a lot of this is just bitterness and an old man shouting at the clouds. Yes - in the olden days, if something happened at Villa, the world and its wife wanted to hear your thoughts. Now nobody cares what any of us think. The club is global, no one person can just call the CEO and have a chat like the old days, and organisations like ours proliferate in a DEI friendly era. Everyone has a say through social media and phone ins. But nobody’s say means anything. Your access to the big dogs and owners has presumably gone, as fanzines and forums in 2025 are sadly as relevant as the Boer War. But yeah, blame Jews innit. Bloody Jewish Villans causing all these problems. Over and outHow to make friends and influence people. <rolls eyes emoticon>