I am not a member of, nor do I align myself with, any
political party; but I do vote. I do not vote for the politician or the party
that I agree with the most, but rather, for whoever agrees with me the most.
When I’m not too sure, I tend to vote for those parties that have absolutely no
chance of getting elected: the rationale being that I will have a clear conscience
when the elected proceed to work on behalf of the powerful global super-rich,
who facilitated their election, instead of working on behalf of the people who
voted for them.
Friday, 9 May 2014
Monday, 5 May 2014
The Scottish Referendum: the potential divorce.
On May 2nd, I attended a presentation on the
upcoming Scottish Referendum at Queens University Belfast. It was delivered by
Dr Michael Rosie of University
of Edinburgh.
[Dr Rosie is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Edinburgh
and Director of the University’s Institute of Governance. Dr Rosie specialises
in studying the political sociology of Scotland. The event was facilitated by Professor John
Brewer of the Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation and Social
Justice at Queens].
Dr Rosie is a man
well-versed on the subject matter of anything Scottish. His presentation was
delivered with great ease, comprehensive and quite entertaining. No
pretentions with this academic: excellent lunchtime entertainment.
Sunday, 4 May 2014
Irish Cup Final: Time to ban noise at Windsor Park?
The Irish Cup Final 2014 between Ballymena United and
Glenavon was a positive for Irish League football. The standard of football may
have been generally poor as both teams seemed jittery on the big occasion, but
the game was entertaining: the atmosphere and enthusiasm on the day was
brilliant.
In Ballymena the build-up to the final had been passionate and
infectious and apparently it was exactly the same in Lurgan. Thousands
travelled to the city from the two towns and a great day was had by all. Even
for us Ballymena United fans, disappointed with the result, the overall experience was
nonetheless very positive. Well done to both clubs and to the Irish Football
Association.
Just a couple of points for the IFA though. Firstly, I’ve
heard of the frustration of many football fans who wanted to attend the final
as neutrals but they couldn’t easily find tickets. The Irish Cup Finals are
great occasions and hopefully when the new Railway stand is built at Windsor
Park the IFA will take this into consideration.
Secondly: is it just me or did anyone else find the obnoxiously
loud pre-match amplified music, not only unnecessary but irrelevant, irritating
and frustrating? Both sets of fans
turned up in their thousands well before kick-off: they just wanted to sing and
let off steam. The Ballymena fans were in full voice and it looked as if Glenavon
fans were doing the same but I couldn’t hear them at all.
There was also a pipe band hired to play the pre-match
entertainment but I couldn’t hear them either: except for the first two notes of the national
anthem before the crowd began singing along. No doubt the pipe band was very
good. No doubt if we could have heard the Glenavon fans singing it could have
allowed for some good-natured back and forth banter. Even Alan Simpson's entertaining pre-match and half-time commentary could have done without the musical breaks being set at such high decibels.
I have experienced the same levels of amplified noise interfering with the atmosphere
before Northern Ireland international games. Occasionally it works okay when
they play songs like Sweet Caroline or
the Jackie Fullerton version of We’re not
Brazil and the crowd sings along. But, it really is unnecessary. Northern
Ireland fans do not require any prompting to sing.
Can the IFA do anything about this or do we need to apply to
the European Union to have this noise pollution banned?
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