Gabrielle Marcoti text him to ask him and he said he'd get on to his administrator..... Poor **** has had his account hacked for months and just didn't notice.
“Some came from a land beyond the sea from Boston and New York, but the boys who beat the Black and Tans were the boys from the County Cork"
Thursday, 12 January 2012
FRANKIE BOYLE AND THE CELTIC BIGOTS
IT is no surprise that “comedian” Frankie Boyle has joined the massed ranks of Celtic supporters railing against the Scottish Parliament’s anti sectarian laws.
Though they were all happy enough when it was only Rangers and their supporters who were in the firing line as the unco guid went about limiting the right of free speech for Her Majesty’s loyal subjects.
Incidentally, the inverted commas around comedian, when applied to Frankie Boyle, merely illustrates my judgment of his talent for making people laugh. Boyle is as about as funny as getting root canal work done.
But back to the new anti-sectarian laws.
Before they were drawn up there were no clearly defined no go areas for Celtic fans. They could get away with branding Protestants as “Orange bastards,” or “dirty Huns,” and they could sing the Boys of the Old Brigade and chant Up the Ra with impunity.
Not so now!
Which is why Joe O’Rourke from the Official Celtic Supporters Association, Jeanette Findlay from the Celtic Trust, plus the Green Brigade, have all taken the huff.
Muffle those evil bigoted black hearted Proddies, but leave us alone to use whatever insults we fancy and sing in praise of terrorist sectarian murderers if we chose to, is what various Celtic fans’ groups have been bleating.
Now, along comes Boyle with a new slant. He reckons the new anti sectarian laws are an attack on the working class people of Scotland.
At least Boyle has said something funny at last.
The funny thing is that, in some way, I agree with Boyle, O’Rourke, the Green Brigade and even that burd Findlay from the Celtic Trust.
Alex Salmond, never a man to spot a spotlight without indulging in the soft shoe shuffle, introduced the completely unnecessary legislation as a knee jerk reaction and waltzed his way into trouble.
It was and is not, needed, as the existing laws were perfectly capable of dealing with what was and remains a minor problem which, mainly because of Celtic supporters and their anti Rangers campaign, has been blown up out of all proportion.
Never has there been a clearer example, as far as those Celtic fans are concerned, of being careful of what you wish for. The law of unintended consequences at work.
So, just as Rangers fans have been told the use of the word “Fenian” and the singing of the Famine Song is illegal, so now Celtic supporters have been warned the same thing about calling Protestants, “Orange Bastards,” or “durty Huns” and singing The Boys of the Old Brigade and Up The Ra!
It’s a funny old world. Or at least it is when Frankie Boyle isn’t trying to raise a laugh.
**** sake
I think Mr Pot needs to be re-introduced to Mr Slavvering Kettle.
Еуропеьс Ларгест Пенис
We've only been told not to sing "Ohh Ahh Up The 'Ra".....
BotB and calling them "Durty Huns" is still totally OK.
**** THE HUNS
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own
"It was and is not, needed, as..."
This bloke used to be a journalist aye?
"This has to be said about Rangers, as a Scottish football club they are a permanent embarrassment and an occasional disgrace. This country would be a better place if Rangers did not exist"
- I. Archer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V19sDA49Iio&feature=related
"Best pop video ever" - Gore Vidal
Frankie Boyle? To be fair it sounds like a Kafflik name ergo he must be "wan o them"
It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into.
"This has to be said about Rangers, as a Scottish football club they are a permanent embarrassment and an occasional disgrace. This country would be a better place if Rangers did not exist"
- I. Archer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V19sDA49Iio&feature=related
"Best pop video ever" - Gore Vidal
superhoops is funnier than either...
for the record Im not a Virgin I had sex For the first time 5 years ago and secondly I have a good appetite for hot chicks
Are you ready for this today?
It's a belter - for the record, Fenlon's quote in the paper said that he had gotten verbals before the Beath game in Ireland as he played for Linfield - this gets transformed into....
Friday, 13 January 2012
PHILMACGIOLLABHAIN'S COVER UP OF SECTARIAN ATTACK ON LINFIELD PLAYER IN DUBLIN
THE sheer scale and depth of Philmacgiollabhain’s hatred for Scotland, the land of his birth, is breathtaking.
And chilling!
As is his penchant for not telling all of a story. Only the bits which suit what appears to be his bitter and twisted agenda are cherry picked and then twisted into bitterness and bigotry.
I am well aware these are powerful accusations to level at anyone, but it is hard to reach any other sort of conclusion, especially after examining the way he wrote about the sectarian abuse hurled at Hibernian’s Republic of Ireland manager, Pat Fenlon, when he took his team to play Cowdenbeath.
According to Philmacgiollabhain, the painful fact that sectarian remarks were made by Fife fans, is proof positive that Scotland is a country where hatred towards Irish Roman Catholics is both deep rooted and widely held.
Now, until the incident, it had not occurred to me that Fenlon was a Roman Catholic. Though it should have.
For the fact that the IRA murdering terror squads – the Boys of the Old Brigade - launched a pogrom of ethnic against Southern Ireland’s Protestants on the establishment of the Free State, thus chasing those Protestants who were not liquidated, to the north, should have alerted me to the fact that Fenlon was unlikely to be a member of any Reformed Church.
But, as a manager from the Republic of Ireland, working in Scottish football, Fenlon is unusual, in much the same way Dick Advocaaat was.
As a Dutchman working in Scotland he got called a wee(which he is) Dutch(which he also is) bastard( which I have no knowledge of him being).
It is the way of the world. If someone is different, then that difference is picked up on and commented on, usually in brutal language, especially by football fans who traditionally use the language of the factory floor.
That is one aspect which Philmacgiollabhain always ignores when he sits in his Donegal lair in the Republic of Ireland, spewing his bile against the country which spawned him, educated and nurtured him and provided him with employment until he emigrated.
But there was also one particular aspect of the Pat Fenlon tale which Philmacgiollabhain chose to ignore, possibly through his lack of experience, but many may think, due to it not conforming to his view of what kind of a nation Scotland is and what kind of a wee country, where he has chosen to live and work, the Republic of Ireland is.
In an excellent and probing interview with the always worth reading Michael Grant in the Herald, Fenlon revealed how he was subjected to vile sectarian abuse in….
DUBLIN!
Fenlon, you see, was the first Dublin footballer to go to Northern Ireland to play for Linfield, a team which draws its support from the Protestant working class community.
According to Fenlon, this led to yobs shouting their hatred in his direction when he returned to his native Dublin.
Again, due to the Boys of the Old Brigade exterminating the Protestants in the 1920s, we must assume these sectarian bigots who shouted foul mouthed threats at Fenlon in Dublin, were Roman Catholics.
Of course this is not anything new. One young Rangers player from the Republic of Ireland has already spoken of the threats has suffered when visiting his family. While the father of a young Republic of Ireland player, who Rangers wanted to sign, was advised not to by his dad, for fear for the boy’s safety and also the safety of the rest of the family.
None of this makes the whole population of the Republic of Ireland anti Protestant, though there are clearly a fair few whose views are directly inherited down from those murdering racist sectarian fascists of the Boys of the Old Brigade.
But examining this wider problem and reporting on the story concerning Pat Fenlon, the whole story and nothing but the truth of that whole story, would clearly not help anyone who was bigoted, sectarian, hate filled and with views many may feel verged on fascism, reinforce their prejudices.
Now that the whole Pat Fenlon story has been made public, many may feel that cap fits Philmacgiollabhain.
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Еуропеьс Ларгест Пенис
It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into.
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