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Conspiracies, Paranoia, Innocence and Guilt

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  • Conspiracies, Paranoia, Innocence and Guilt

    Conspiracies, Paranoia, Innocence and Guilt




    • Chris Rowland,Free, Media Watch

      Posted on February 16th, 2012
      Posted by by Chris Rowland
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      By Chris Rowland.
      Do you know how all this has felt to me? Since the ‘probably guilty’ verdict, I mean, and The Mirror‘s inflammatory headline the next day, the beginning of the heavy shelling that’s barely abated for two months now.
      This is how it’s felt:
      ‘A raging torrent of spite, bile and hysteria, fire and brimstone of biblical proportions and enough humbug to choke on.’
      ‘The message was universal, the verdict unanimous: guilty. No redeeming or mitigating factors. Guilty.
      ‘the sheer, impenetrable edifice of condemnation.’
      ‘Scapegoats were in huge demand, and the slavering tabloid press led the hunt voraciously, revelling in its self-appointed role as the Voice of Reason whilst displaying absolutely none, and the licence (the incident) appeared to give it to rant unchecked in an orgy of self-righteous bigotry. Balance and reason, it seemed, had no part in this public “debate”.
      ‘A complex concurrence of circumstances had been reduced to child-like simplicity, and I just couldn’t reconcile what I was reading with what I had experienced.’
      Only I didn’t write all that about Suarez. I wrote it about Heysel in From Where I Was Standing, the book I was driven to write by the very same burning anger and sense of injustice that’s in me again now.
      I’m not trying to court self-publicity in reproducing it. I just think it’s relevant to what follows. As I said, I’ve felt like this before.
      As Rob Gutmann so deftly put it in yet another bullseye on The Anfield Wrap, ‘ Heysel was about life and death. It was more important than an argument between two millionaire athletes, and the loyalties of two warring tribes. The Suarez and Evra mess, though, has come to echo 1985, for me at least, because there are parallels in terms of the sheer momentum of shame being foisted upon what felt then, and still feels now, like our family.’
      For me too, Rob.
      ‘The most despicable South American since General Pinochet’ trumpeted one UK newspaper about Suarez, as though it somehow considered it appropriate and proportionate to compare ‘an argument between two millionaire athletes’ and a refused handshake with a brutal dictator whose regime tortured and killed on anindustrial scale.
      There are echoes of Heysel all right, in the victimisation, the demonisation, of seemingly everything connected with Liverpool Football Club. In the expectation of shared collective guilt, that we should all do the decent thing, hang our heads in meek supplication and admit to being murderers then and racists now. (Witness the incredible tweet recently, after all this time, by Patrick Barclay of The Times, in his response to an LFC fan asking ‘do you get any lower than accepting Murdoch’s cash?’ ‘See your point. But, yes, you can. For example, you can be in a crowd that crushes 39 people to death.’ [http://i.imgur.com/1pMSD.png])
      Phew, some stored up venom there. Well just as an aside Paddy, the group of eight I was with were still outside the stadium when it happened. Does that make us murderers? How exactly? I wouldn’t want to see your face on a jury. Or anywhere else for that matter.
      Some of our younger subscribers who’ve known no other may be surprised to learn that these pious self-appointed guardians of the nation’s moral wellbeing that we are saddled with today have not always sat atop their high horse, searching for scouse scalps and courting ticks on their websites, pre-programmed to invert logic and pervert truth in the process.
      No – and this may come as a shock – they once used to concentrate on the football, and were even quite complimentary about us. About the team, certainly – although the team gave them little scope for much else, they were too good and too successful. But even about us lot. The fans. We were respected as a club back in the 60s, 70s and 80s. Until Heysel.
      After our first European Cup Final, in Rome in 1977, and a mass evacuation of at least 30,000 Liverpool supporters, the media coverage was overwhelmingly positive. This is how I described it in From Where I Was Standing:
      ‘Stripped to the waist in the spring sunshine, many were noisy and drunk in the cafes, bars and piazzas. One Italian newspaper, Repubblica, claimed that at last Italians would be able to shed their inferiority complex about supposedly impeccable standards of British behaviour.
      But when the same fans came to leave the city two days later, many to face that nightmare return train journey, opinions had shifted. Il Messagero wrote ”What were all our fears about? There was no rape, no pillage. The horde passed by without violence, debauchery or depravity.” (You can see the high standards that were expected of us). “The only thing Roma can offer Liverpool is an apology plus well played, thanks and have a safe journey home.”
      The British press was equally complimentary. In its report on Liverpool’s victory, The Times wrote: “Here there was nothing but friendly greetings, and all of football’s problems seemed far away. It was later to become a night when British football could be proud of its champions and its followers.” Even The Sun, still shunned and despised today by Liverpool supporters years after its grotesque post-Hillsborough coverage, carried a footnote reading: “In Rome newspapers praised the Liverpool fans for the way they behaved.
      The most penetrating observation appeared in The Daily Mail: “I hope that the best part of the legend Liverpool leave behind is that they proved you can have bacchanalia without going beyond the limits. My final memory is of a Liverpool fan of ferocious appearance and impressively drunk at the reception. He lurched over to the Minister of Sport, Denis Howell, and said ‘Don’t worry mister, we’re going to have the time of our lives. But we’re not Leeds or Man United. You will not be ashamed of us.’”
      For eight more years he was right.’
      In Paris 1981, the Daily Mirror referred to our‘lovely, lively, raucous fans’ (no Olly Holt and David Maddock then of course). A lot of us are still there now – still lovely, if not quite as lively or raucous anymore.
      And then came Heysel. And changed everything. We haven’t had much joy from the media since, apart from a sporadic outbreak following the miracle of Istanbul. But then if that didn’t stir you you really shouldn’t be in sports journalism.
      My question is, are Heysel and Hillsborough, memorably described by Paul Tomkins as ‘the twin H-bombs of our history’, the magma chamber for the series of media explosions that extended through Rafa’s spell and culminated in Suarez (I’m using the past tense there with fingers firmly crossed but breath not being held).
      Because if they’re not, what is? I’ll come to that later.
      Never mind your balance of probabilities; that there is an agenda seems beyond any reasonable doubt. Liverpool FC does not appear to be treated the same as any other club by the media.
      Several examples of their duplicity and double standards have occurred during their recently discovered zeal for anti-racism. One ********-for-brains Kopite racially abuses (allegedly) an Oldham player; suddenly it was ‘a section of the Kop’ and it’s front page. The equally-********-for-brains guy who did the monkey dance against United at Anfield? Check – front page.
      The repeated Chelsea fan chants about Anton Ferdinand, who apparently knows what he is? Er – no. Chelsea fans’ arrested for racist singing on the train back from Norwich? Not really news is it? The Cardiff City fan clearly heard to shout ‘you black bastard’ to a Crystal Palace sub who came on, live on BBC in the Carling Cup semi-final second leg? Not a peep.
      Man Utd coming top of the list of arrests at Premier League matches, and for arrests for racist chanting? If you relied on the media you’d never be any the wiser (Dan Kennett sent in the Home Office data for arrests in the Premier League in the 2010/11 season http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publica...11?view=Binary).
      Ok, how about a live bullet sent to Anton Ferdinand in the post, surely that’s a big news story, given the hot news topic of the day and the logical assumption that it had some connection with the John Terry-Anton Ferdinand case? Well not much coverage actually. As this site’s owner said, ‘a bullet to Anton Ferdinand was worthy of only one Tweet by one senior journalist, but Liverpool fans booing Evra was worthy of five. Remember, boos are just disapproval, straight from a pantomime; a bullet is a death threat.’
      Switching targets briefly from racism to homophobia, did Michael Ball’s undisguised homophobic tweet attract the avenging wrath of the FA or the media just itching for the chance to send a clear signal to the world about just how damn seriously they take this issue? Well the club ended his contract anyway (not that he was on much of one to start with), so let’s call that dealt with shall we? Saves us getting our hands dirty. No pompous, self-righteous, sanctimonious, judgmental moralising about any of these instances from the media. They’re presumably all either okay or not important. Not like 2 people out of over 80,000 being done for racism at Anfield.
      Gary Neville of Sky Sports TV fame recently said that Sky were always hammering on about ‘finding the story’. There is pressure on all journos and commentators to weave around an established theme. But ‘the story’ now seems to have come to mean ‘anything negative or critical about Liverpool FC.’ All seems to pass through that filter. And when all sports news is passed through that crazily narrow, truth-ignoring prism, we reach the grotesquely distorted point where one of the most compelling ‘stories’ for years for a true sports journo – the bullet sent to Anton Ferdinand – is dismissed as scarcely newsworthy because it can’t be crowbarred somehow into an anti-Suarez story.
      Then of course there’s Martin Samuel, whose twisted logic in his article about ‘whispered’ racism culminated in a conclusion so bizarre it defies belief; that video evidence of Terry abusing Ferdinand suggests he actually didn’t do it, but the complete absence of any corroborative evidence against Suarez makes it all the more likely that he was guilty. Stunning, and thus standing the entire basis of English law on its head. Proof of guilt proves your innocence, lack of proof proves you’re guilty.
      As I posted at the time, if you’re thinking of ram-raiding your local Argos anytime soon, better make sure it’s caught on CCTV to prove you’re innocent. Catch 22 or what?
      There was a renewed shitstorm following Non-handshake-gate. A radio discussion about whether Dalglish should be sacked for his part in it, a Member of Parliament (George Galloway) even suggesting deportation – ”If Dalglish doesn’t sack Luis Suarez the Home Secretary should deport him”, stated a man who believes firmly in the symbolic gesture of the handshake, having shaken Saddam Hussein’s in the height of the pre-war tension. Dave Maddock in the Mirror was at it again, saying that Suarez will be sold in the summer, Ollie Holt (again the Mirror) tweeting that before the Liverpool game at Old Trafford, police confiscating Utd fanzines containing cut out Ku-Klux Klan-style white hoods saying ‘Suarez is innocent’ was over-reaction, it was just a bit of fun. Just as he tweeted, astonishingly, that his ‘black friend’ said that calling a black player ’a ********ing black cunt’ (which just happens to mirror the accusation made against John Terry) might not necessarily be insulting or racist. ‘Don’t know.’
      Well I and everybody does know, Ollie.
      All of which brings me on to Sir Alex Ferguson. I’ll use his knighted tag because I’m about to be much less deferential towards him. Sir Alex knows racism is a bad thing, he’s said so often enough recently, and not just because Liverpool happened to be United’s next league game or anything. He told us all, and the media, that ‘Suarez is a disgrace and should be sold by Liverpool’ (thereby perhaps revealing the underlying motivation for the whole Suarez episode).
      Disregarding the troubling fact that his megalomania now seems so out of control that he believes he has an influence over another club’s transfer policy – I don’t remember Liverpool recommending United sell kung-fu Cantona – let’s look at this knight of the realm’s actual record in terms of racial respect; here’s how he respects the Germans for example: after Bayern had knocked United out of the Champions League at Old Trafford after a Utd player was sent off, he said:
      “The young boy showed a bit of inexperience but they got him sent off, everyone sprinted towards the referee – typical Germans.”
      [Which begs the question: is Roy Keane German?]
      Do the Italians fare any better?
      “When an Italian says it’s pasta I check under the sauce to make sure. They are innovators of the smokescreen.”
      Yep, every last one of ‘em.
      But maybe the best example of Fergie’s bigotry and racial stereotyping was reserved for – wait for it – Uruguayans, way back in 1986.Yes, he’s never liked Suarez’s lot one bit.
      If we set his comments alongside the United Nation’s definition of racial discrimination…
      The term “racial discrimination” shall mean any distinction, exclusion, restriction, or preference based on race, colour, descent, or national or ethnic origin that has the purpose or effect of nullifying or impairing the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal footing, of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural or any other field of public life
      …then it’s quite clear that discrimination based on nationality fits into the UN definition of racial discrimination. So has Ferguson really earned the right to adopt any moral high ground on racism? But have the media questioned this or pursued this narrative? No, of course not. Why not – are they afraid of upsetting him? Or deterred by United’s litigious approach to media indiscretions or negative coverage, reacting like a repressive totalitarian regime whenever anyone dares question them?
      [Check out how he responded to that old sheep-skinned sheepdog John Motson in 2005. Motson asks Ferguson if he would punish Keane who had just been sent off for the third time in 14 games. Ferguson says: "You've no right to ask that question John - you're out of order... you know fine well my ruling on that. Right, that's the interview finished... I'm going to cancel that interview, the whole ********ing lot of it. Cancel it, right? ********ing make sure that does not go out, John."]
      Come on everybody, we don’t get even-handed treatment from the media, they’re not like this with every club, the train has left that station. Fans of other clubs will say that they are, of course, and we’re just being paranoid. That’s an easy stance to take if it’s not your club being ritually vilified and pursued up a hillside by a baying torchlit mob. You might even secretly, or not very secretly at all, quite enjoy the spectacle of your rivals’ evisceration.
      The anti-Liverpool sentiment has happened far too often and for too long to be coincidence. All those other examples I mentioned earlier should surely at least make the most cynical start to wonder.
      Well now a non-Liverpool fan has noticed too.
      Newsframes is a website that contains studies of the media in action. In a recent investigation into churnalism, they took an in-depth look at the Suarez coverage. One comment in Part 2 (Media on Racism: Part 2 – Framing) got into my head like an angry bee:
      ‘As an outsider, with no affiliations to Liverpool, fan-wise or otherwise, I observed the “respectable” media’s outpouring of vitriol (over nothing very much) with puzzlement. It was almost as if there were some kind of PR/lobbying going on behind the scenes.’
      That last line got me thinking. Because I’ve been wrestling with this for some time, seeking a rational explanation for the vitriol, the imbalance, the downright hostility that started to descend on Rafa and continues on the club long after his demise.
      If this not solely a paranoid fantasy – and I concede that it might be – then who on earth would have such an anti-Liverpool agenda that they are prepared to court the media and lobby the anti-Liverpool line, and have enough influence, reach and motivation to mount such a campaign of briefing and lobbying?
      Could what we witness almost daily not just be a case of all the media all coming to the same conclusion at the same time – ie that anything connected to LFC is the anti-Christ – but actually be the result of an orchestrated and ongoing campaign?
      We know Paddy Barclay thinks we still need taking to task over Heysel, we know there may be some residual spite and guile stored up from Hillsborough and our ongoing anti-Sun/McKenzie campaign, we know Henry Winter and a few others were Hodgson groupies who didn’t like how roughly we handled their poppet, and we wonder whether BBC Sport, having moved to Salford Quays, may now be absorbing the skewed Manchester agenda on Liverpool by osmosis.
      We also know David Gill of Manchester United is a prominent member of the FA – a neat impartial arrangement – and that Denis Smith who the FA deemed should form one third of the panel that ‘investigated’ the Evra-Suarez case had managed Darren Ferguson and become a friend of the family. We know that Lord Herman Ouseley, Chairman of Kick It Out and vocal advocate of Suarez and Liverpool being banged to rights, is also a member of the Manchester United Foundation. We know David Maddock from The Mirror twisted Luis’ words from an interview with a Uruguayan radio station to make it sound more incriminating, and that after Suarez’s return against Spurs, Kenny’s post-match comment that Luis shouldn’t have been banned in the first place was reported as “Dalglish says Suarez should not have been banned for making racist comments”. When what it should have read was: “Dalglish says Suarez should not have been banned because we don’t believe he made racist comments.”
      As someone on TTT pointed out, it’s the difference between ‘Family of Joe Bloggs who was charged with murdering Mr X say he’s innocent and should not have been jailed” and “Family of Joe Bloggs says they don’t think he should have been jailed for murdering Mr X.”
      Perhaps that’s just standard media sleight of hand, and hardly news when it’s in isolation. But this emphatically isn’t.
      That there is anti-Liverpool influence in high places is undeniable.
      The question is, are we being paranoid or are they really out to get us?

      This entry was posted on Thursday, February 16th, 2012 at 4:58 pm and is filed underChris Rowland, Free, Media Watch. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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    © Paul Tomkins 2008 – 2012
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    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    Peter,Paul,Gamma & Karl a must read , I will excuse Lazie ,Jangle & the Man Uites ,it requires critical thinking and an unbiased mind.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

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    • #3
      Handshakes, Apologies and Storms in Teacups




      • Featured, Free

        Posted on February 12th, 2012
        Posted by by Paul Tomkins
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        Reading Twitter, it seems that Liverpool FC is pretty hated right now. I’d imagine that it’s even worse in the mass media, but I do my best to avoid chip wrappings and rent-a-gob TV.
        Maybe a lot of Liverpool fans don’t care – and a siege mentality rarely hurts a football club – but I feel we’re being seriously misunderstood right now.
        (Then again, Joey Barton and Mario Balotelli probably feel the same, and they don’t get cut a lot of slack either. Sometimes they deserve criticism, other times it’s just a bandwagon of condemnation.)
        In PR terms, the club, and Luis Suarez, had little option but to apologise for the absence of a handshake. I can see why it didn’t look good to outsiders, but when Sky’s Martin Tyler joins a list of people saying that Evra appeared to avoid the handshake too, it’s sad to see it all about the evils of Luis Suarez.
        Suarez had his hand out, but with Evra looking non-committal, he hurried past. If he grabs Evra’s hand, he’s forcing the United man to accept it. Both men were put in an awkward position, and yet again Britain gets into a lather about a handshake.

        (The handshake being the storm in a teacup, not the issue of racism.)
        Septicemia
        If games against Chelsea summed up Rafa Benítez’s reign – Mourinho winning the early league games, the Reds winning the big cup clashes – then Dalglish’s second tenure at Liverpool is defined by games against Manchester United.
        First, he returned – so unexpectedly – to the hot-seat the weekend the Reds went to Old Trafford, and lost. Next, the Reds blew away United at Anfield, with Kuyt scoring a hat-trick and Suarez embarrassing the United defence. A couple of weeks ago, Liverpool won in the FA Cup thanks to a dramatic late Dirk Kuyt goal, but a few months before that came the 1-1 draw at Anfield, with the infamous Suarez/Evra affair. That game affected this weekend’s encounter, and will affect many more to come, it seems. Bad blood has turned septic.
        If you’re an LFC fan vehemently opposed to racism but not convinced of Suarez’s guilt, you’re pretty much damned right now. If Suarez has indeed been guilty all along, then he’s got a lot to apologise for. But if he has been innocent, he’s been given an unimaginably tough time.
        Life would be simpler for us now had Luis Suarez shook Patrice Evra’s hand, although anyone saying his refusal was “pre-meditated” is a mind reader. The apologies help put the issue to bed, and hopefully the world moves on. The hysteria has been exhausting.
        My view before the match was that Suarez should have been left out, to give the goading Old Trafford a sense of anticlimax, and no-one at whom to aim its ire. After all, did United playing Evra the other week help them?
        In truth, Suarez actually performed with a lot of self-control, and scored a goal, but United were hyped up by his presence. Evra, in trying to clatter Suarez after 30 seconds, instead almost put Rio Ferdinand in hospital. At the end, Suarez left the pitch in a dignified manner, unlike his accuser.
        Of course, leaving Suarez out could be seen as another sign of his guilt over the racism issue. It’s therefore a call I’m glad I didn’t have to make. But in being seen to have refused Evra’s handshake, Suarez sealed his reputation as the most hated footballer in England right now.
        I’ve seen numerous angles of the handshake in video clips, and Evra’s hand stays low, and Suarez’s hand hurries past. Neither man seems to be holding a hand ‘out’ to the other. Evra escalates the situation by grabbing Suarez, making sure that everyone saw.
        (The same Evra who kissed his United badge to the Kop when supposedly “in shock” at being kicked by Suarez in October, as if a footballer had never been accidentally caught thousands of times in his life before. The same Evra who was in a rage over losing the coin toss in October. The same Evra who started the row in October by saying, in Suarez’s language and not his own, the phrase “your sister’s cunt”. The same Evra who celebrated victory at the weekend in an undignified manner. The same Evra who was called a “liar and a man of low character” by his own FA in 2010, and “unreliable” by our own FA five years ago.
        In other words, not a calm, placid, likeable man like Antonio Valencia, whose word, as someone who appears to just get on with the game, I’d be far happier to accept – even if a man’s word is in itself evidence of nothing but an ability to speak. In cases of one word against the other, you have to consider the character of the accuser, and not just the accused. We know that the neutrals don’t trust Suarez with many of his antics – he certainly exaggerates contacts on fouls, and will seek to gain an advantage in a number of ways – but why trust Evra, either?)
        If – and I mean if – Suarez feels that he was harshly punished due to Evra lying about him, then he has a right to feel very aggrieved and refuse a handshake. Yes, he let Liverpool FC down if he’d promised to shake hands, but in the heat of the moment, perhaps he felt differently when confronted with the situation.
        It’s time to make handshakes voluntary. The FA spared John Terry the ignominy at QPR, but here, only Luis Suarez was going to look bad if a handshake was refused.
        John Barnes, whose views of racism have been enlightened, found the whole thing farcical:
        “We’re making a mountain out of a molehill. We are not the custodians of moral value in the world, we think we are but we’re not. There’s worse things happening in the world, worse things happening in the country, everything should not be laid at footballers’ doors.”
        Alex Ferguson had his say. “Disgraceful,” screamed the headlines, as if he’d written them himself (which, of course, in his own way he had). Suarez should be sold; he should never play for Liverpool again.
        Who the hell is he to tell Liverpool Football Club how to conduct its business? Of course he wants to drive Suarez out of England and Liverpool, just as he did with Benítez, against whom his English LMA cronies ganged up. Of course he doesn’t want Dalglish in charge of Liverpool. He was happiest when Roy Hodgson was around, and the Reds were in the bottom half of the table. (The same Hodgson who refused to condemn Ferguson when he called Fernando Torres, who had clearly been fouled, a “cheat”.)
        The same Ferguson who stood by Peter Schmeichel over claims of racial abuse aimed at Ian Wright (basically saying that Schmeichel couldn’t be racist, as he’d visited South Africa with United two years earlier). He stood by Roy Keane, who admitted purposely injuring Alfe Inge Haaland, with a horrific career-ending tackle. He stood by players who refused to shake Patrick Vieira’s hand. The same Ferguson who stuck by Rio Ferdinand after he failed to turn up for a drug’s test, which therefore meant he could have been hiding something (not that I necessarily think he was). The same Ferguson who took on Eric Cantona, who’d already attacked a referee in France, and then happily welcomed him back after a kung-fu kick on some idiot in the crowd.
        “Indefensible!”, is what I keep getting told by random Tweeps. Yet Suarez was found guilty on the balance of probabilities, without evidence or corroboration, by process that finds 0.5% of people innocent. Following it up by not shaking hands is “indefensible”?
        “Indefensible” suggests a very serious crime, committed by someone caught in the act, with no doubt whatsoever about their guilt. Banged to rights. Fingerprints all over the scene. Gun still smoking. Someone like Edmund Kemper, perhaps, who admitted to engaging in oral sex – or at least trying to – with the decapitated heads of his defenceless female victims, including that of his mother. He led the police to their bodies (and heads).
        By contrast, Luis Suarez was found guilty of possibly saying something racially inappropriate (due to cultural differences) in a conversation that had many opportunities for misunderstanding. (The conversation was started by a black Frenchman, in Spanish, on English soil, with a Dutchman called as a witness on behalf of the accused, who was a Uruguayan with a black grandparent. Straightforward, huh?)
        “He was found guilty!” people scream at me, when I question anything to do with the case. But shouldn’t ‘guilt’, as a concept, relate to a court of law? – hard evidence, judge, jury of 12 of your peers, etc, especially when it’s an offence where ‘balance of probabilities’ is not sufficient for the condemnation a guilty verdict will produce?
        Last week, Robert Huth was found guilty of serious foul play when he slid into Sunderland’s David Meyler, despite the fact that it was as clear as day that he was trying to pull out of the tackle.
        “An independent regulatory commission has today dismissed the claim of wrongful dismissal of Stoke City’s Robert Huth. The defender will serve a three-match suspension with immediate effect following his red card for serious foul play in the game with Sunderland on February 4.”
        Of course, being found guilty in such situations doesn’t lead to vilification. Players get ‘done’ for violent conduct all the time, yet don’t necessarily get labelled as violent people. Suarez is now labelled ‘racist’ for life.
        “He admitted it!” others scream of Suarez. Some even say that he admitted to calling Evra “a negro”. (If you are in this latter category, why should I even bother trying to put you right?)
        But the linguistics experts in the FA report essentially agree with both men. Basically, they say that if what Suarez claims to have said was true, its intent would not have been racist; but that if what Evra alleged was true, it would have been racist. So, who decides? Should one of the three chosen be accepted when he boasts on his own autobiography that he saved Alex Ferguson’s job?
        I recently wrote the following in an email interview for The Trawler (to appear later this week): “Liverpool fans, including at least two fairly prominent lawyers, pored over the report because they felt it seriously flawed. If a decision goes your way, you say “that’s it, case closed”. You don’t want to look any deeper; you want to move on. If it doesn’t, you want to find the faults. It’s like when you get too much change from the supermarket – you just carry on. But if you get overcharged, you go through the receipt, item by item.”
        I’ve probably lost the respect of loads of neutral supporters and writers over the issue, and to a degree that upsets me. I’ve certainly lost respect for those who simply follow the narrative, and who refuse to even consider an alternate reality. (And yes, I have considered the version where Suarez is guilty; I can’t prove that he isn’t guilty, of course – just as, based on the evidence, no-one could prove in a court of law that he is.)
        Spiral of Silence
        The only neutral source to have analysed the case with a critical eye rather than moral indignation is News Frames. The author of the blog does not support any football club, and until this issue, had dealt mostly with political and social reporting.
        I asked News Frames why the story was playing out this way. The author believed it to be related to the sociological phenomenon called ‘spiral of silence’.
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral_of_silence
        People dare not go against the grain. I’ve certainly wished I’d kept quiet at times, as it seems the aggro just isn’t worth it. To even dare suggest that an alternative to the media narrative may exist is worthy of a truckload of abuse. Suggest someone may be innocent of racism, and you get labelled a racist.
        As the News Frames blog noted several weeks ago:
        “I’m reminded of another T-shirt gesture to protest a man’s innocence. It’s a different type of case, but the underlying logic (of protest) is exactly the same. Amnesty Internationalpublished a statement about the flawed evidence against a man (Troy Davis) convicted of murder. There was a campaign (‘Too Much Doubt’) to raise awareness of problems with the evidence and the legal process.
        The Guardian supported the campaign (T-shirts and all). Nobody, to my knowledge, argued that, in so doing, they were supporting the crime (rather than the man and his claims of innocence). The logic of protesting wasn’t drowned out with cries of “shameful” or “beyond the pale” – at least not in the UK’s “liberal” media.
        http://newsframes.wordpress.com/2012...acism-framing/
        Appeal
        The point that a lot of neutrals seem to be missing is that both player and manager can believe in Suarez’s innocence.
        I don’t know why Liverpool did not launch an appeal. Perhaps they hoped to move on from a situation that was causing a lot of PR damage, with the media already outraged that they might have the temerity to dare consider such a move. (People like the Mail’s Martin Samuel had already said, many months before the verdict, that Suarez was likely to be guilty as racists are sly, and do things unseen, but that John Terry was likely to be innocent, as people don’t do that kind of thing publicly. So much for a fair press!)
        Perhaps Liverpool didn’t trust the system; after all, the FA finds people guilty 99.5% of the time. Why repeat a trial in a kangaroo court?
        Perhaps they don’t trust the FA, with Manchester United’s David Gill a key part of their decision-making process.
        Perhaps they knew that, in the admirable drive to rid the game of racism, a scapegoat had to be found.
        Perhaps, from a purely footballing point of view, they wanted to get the suspension out of the way to have the player back for more important games.
        Or perhaps they suspected that Suarez was guilty. This is a possibility, obviously; just not, as many have you believe, the only logical explanation.
        The Future?
        A lot of fans are fearing that Suarez may have to be sold. I started resigning myself to this a few months back; a move to Spain, for a large transfer fee, might do everyone the world of good. He’s become the boogeyman, responsible for all the ills of the English game, it seems. A lovely bloke off the pitch, by all accounts, he’s certainly controversial on it.
        I’m not sure how the circus that surrounds him goes away, unless he himself does. Time will lessen the hatred, and dull the hysteria, but the stain on his character remains.
        He’s the club’s best player, so that makes it tough. Ferguson sticks by his players when they overstep the mark. All clubs work this way; it’s easy to offload a troublemaker if he’s not a key player.
        If he stays, then he certainly has my support. He’s served his punishment, even though the evidence of his guilt was so flimsy. But if he goes, we move on. If, by staying, it adversely affects the club, and results on the pitch suffer, then as much as I love his skill and ceaseless desire to win, we look for a new star man.


      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment


      • #4
        The same Ferguson who stood by Peter Schmeichel over claims of racial abuse aimed at Ian Wright (basically saying that Schmeichel couldn’t be racist, as he’d visited South Africa with United two years earlier). He stood by Roy Keane, who admitted purposely injuring Alfe Inge Haaland, with a horrific career-ending tackle. He stood by players who refused to shake Patrick Vieira’s hand. The same Ferguson who stuck by Rio Ferdinand after he failed to turn up for a drug’s test, which therefore meant he could have been hiding something (not that I necessarily think he was). The same Ferguson who took on Eric Cantona, who’d already attacked a referee in France, and then happily welcomed him back after a kung-fu kick on some idiot in the crowd.
        THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

        "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


        "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

        Comment

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