They interviewed somebody in the Standard who was there and said they wouldnt let the black man on the train as it was busyTrain was obviously full and not safe for any further occupants. That's why they were singing "we're safetists".
Give them a medal.
Surely Badiel will comment that it is the fault of the Black man yes?
Surely Badiel will comment that it is the fault of the Black man yes?
I think that I remember people saying on here that this image is Photoshopped
Thanks for sharing this. I think that sometimes we view things like this from a tribal position, see any questioning as a direct criticism of us and then stop listening.
I remember this defense of his. In my opinion, it doesn't wash, at all. I fully agree with him when he says that his video shows Arsenal and Chelsea supporters being anti-semitic, as opposed to Spurs fans - however, in my opinion he's setting up his own straw man (Spurs fans claiming he was targeting them) and knocking it down.
Some of his own companions in Chelsea blue are the racists. He accepts this much. Some of his own companions frequently sing songs about Auschwitz and the gas chambers. He accepts this. Yet, the fact that these supporters cease using 'Yid' and start using 'Spurs' in their Auschwitz songs, and the fact that they often launch into this sort of behaviour without ever using the word 'Yid', is where I feel he just gets utterly disingenuous.
Chelsea fans sing about Auschwitz both with and without the use of the y-word: yet, he suggests that Spurs fans are to blame for that section of Chelsea fans easily getting anti-semitic because this club identifies with its Jewish roots, and because this club's supporters adopted the y-word as a badge of pride to counter the anti-semitism aimed at them for decades. His demand is that Spurs drop the y-word so that anti-semites in Chelsea or Arsenal colours can be more easily tackled: yet, half his video is filled with supporters of both these clubs using 'Spurs' as a stand in for 'Yid', and still singing the same grimly offensive songs they always do.
He is utterly blind to the idea that Spurs, identified as a seemingly 'Jewish' club, will be the target of anti-semitism from some of his own fellow 'Chelsea' fans regardless of whether this club uses the y-word in its chants or not. And by acting that way, he is being utterly disingenuous, blaming Spurs and their usage of the y-word for the anti-semitism a section of his own club's fans spout on a regular basis. That is cowardly, self-serving, and even a bit partisan, and yet he covers it up by claiming that Spurs fans are upset that at the wrong notion that he portrays them too as anti-semitic, which he claims was never his intention.
Spurs fans, I would suggest, are not angry at him for claiming that they're the same as Chelsea - they are angry at him because his desire to shield his own club and fans, even in the face of overwhelming evidence that they possess a significant minority of racists, has led him to somehow claim that Spurs are to blame for Chelsea and Arsenal's fringe elements being anti-semitic.
So, long story short - he's a c*nt, and given that, I would posit that similar logic used by him in this instance would lead to him saying that the man being black gave an excuse for the racists on that train to act out - but of course, he'd never say that given how patently stupid it sounds. And yet he uses that disingenuous logic when it comes to the y-word, and then tried to defend it by setting up stupid straw men and missing the point entirely.
I do not share Baddiel views but I think that he (and other Jews) have a right to question our use of the word yid. It is a term that many people would find offensive and it is right that we are aware of that. I think that unfortunately, many of us have got defensive rather than engaging in a discussion and explaining why we think that it is acceptable.
I could be wrong here but I do not think that Baddiel has ever blamed Spurs fans for Chelsea racism. My understanding was that his argument was that us using the word muddied the water and made it easier for Chelsea, West Ham etc defend using it by saying that they were just repeating a term that we used to refer to ourselves.
I do not share Baddiel views but I think that he (and other Jews) have a right to question our use of the word yid. It is a term that many people would find offensive and it is right that we are aware of that. I think that unfortunately, many of us have got defensive rather than engaging in a discussion and explaining why we think that it is acceptable.
I could be wrong here but I do not think that Baddiel has ever blamed Spurs fans for Chelsea racism. My understanding was that his argument was that us using the word muddied the water and made it easier for Chelsea, West Ham etc defend using it by saying that they were just repeating a term that we used to refer to ourselves.
What exactly do you mean? Specifics please.
I don't doubt there are some people who are extremely racially prejudice amongst Spurs fans, but it's a relatively small small minority. At Chelsea I reckon it is still a minority but a significant one.
I have never heard of Spurs fans pushing black men off trains, monkey chanting black players, making hissing noises at clubs known to have a large Jewish following. Worst I've heard is songs about Munich, Wenger peadophile, Campbell hanging from a tree, Adebayors dad. All are venomous, the last one is the only one I believe to be racist. There's debate about the Campbell one but like the y word it isn't overtly racist.
Pushing a black man off a train and singing we're racist and it doesn't come clearer than that. Apart from calling a Ferdinand a black **** live on global TV.
They interviewed somebody in the Standard who was there and said they wouldnt let the black man on the train as it was busy
I just think that as a Jewish male living in London he knows exactly what the truth is beyond the rhetoric, and if that is what he was saying he was very wide of the mark. FYI...he doesn't annoy me, he just bewilders me TBH...I think in many ways he is a brilliant and funny man. As well as highly articulate. Thus I believe he could articulate himself better in this regard.
I don't disagree with what you are saying. The point I was making was that I find it disappointing that so many Spurs fans get defensive when this argument gets raised.
It is a word that many people find offensive, you could be arrested for using in the street and there are parts of the Jewish community that feel uncomfortable with our use of it.
If we are going to use it, then I think that we need to be prepared to explain why and understand when other people disagree with us.