Cam Ogie ✍ The racist abuse directed at Vinícius Júnior was not an anomaly. It was an exposure.

Vinícius, the Brazilian forward for Real Madrid, has repeatedly been subjected to racist chanting in Spanish stadiums. Each time, the ritual is familiar: outrage, condemnation, symbolic sanctions, rebranded anti-racism campaigns. Yet the incidents recur.

The recurrence is the indictment. The issue is not one chant. It is the structure that makes such abuse foreseeable.

Europe’s Political Climate and the Stadium as Echo Chamber

Racism in football does not exist separately from European politics. Across Europe — particularly in the United Kingdom — immigration has been repeatedly weaponized in electoral discourse. When migrants are framed as threats to stability or cultural cohesion, such rhetoric shapes public culture.

Under Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the British government has aligned itself politically with Israel’s military campaign in Gaza while calling for humanitarian protections and ceasefire arrangements. Critics describe Israel’s actions as genocidal; the UK government does not use that terminology. Regardless of terminology, political alignment influences domestic discourse — and football institutions operate within that climate.

When a staff member at Arsenal FC reportedly lost his role after publicly expressing pro-Palestinian views, questions arose about selective neutrality. By contrast, former player Andriy Shevchenko has publicly expressed support for Israel without comparable sanction. Whether legally identical or not, the perception of asymmetry reinforces the belief that football regulates political speech unevenly.

Selective neutrality is not neutrality. It is alignment disguised as principle.

Celtic, UEFA, and the Hierarchy of Acceptable Solidarity

Supporters of Celtic FC have repeatedly displayed Palestinian flags and banners during European fixtures. Under regulations enforced by UEFA, the club has faced fines for what are classified as “political” messages.

Yet Israel’s national team and affiliated clubs continue to compete in UEFA competitions and globally under FIFA. By contrast, Russia was swiftly suspended from international football competitions following its invasion of Ukraine.

The comparison is structural.

If solidarity with Palestinians is deemed impermissibly political while state participation during large-scale military devastation proceeds uninterrupted, a troubling asymmetry emerges.

That asymmetry risks creating an implicit hierarchy of whose suffering is institutionally actionable and whose is administratively containable.

Racism is not only individual hostility. It is structural differentiation in how human lives are valued. When one population’s suffering justifies sporting exclusion while another’s generates disciplinary action against those expressing solidarity, the message conveyed — intentionally or not — is that some lives disrupt global sport and others do not.

That is not consistent with the universalist anti-racism principles UEFA and FIFA publicly promote.

The GAA, Allianz, and the Global Hierarchy of Values

This pattern is not confined to international football governance.

The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), an organization historically rooted in Irish cultural identity and anti-colonial heritage, has faced controversy over its continued sponsorship relationship with Allianz.

Critics have argued that Allianz’s global activities raise ethical concerns that appear to conflict with the GAA’s stated community-centred ethos. In response, the GAA has relied heavily on procedural language — emphasizing contractual obligations, corporate independence, and neutrality — rather than directly addressing whether the sponsorship relationship aligns with its declared moral framework.

The relevance to the racism critique is not incidental.

When institutions retreat into technical language to justify continued financial relationships despite moral challenge, they participate in a broader system where economic stability outweighs ethical consistency. The hierarchy becomes visible: financial relationships are preserved; moral discomfort is managed rhetorically.

This mirrors the logic seen in global football governance:
 
  • Anti-racism campaigns are emphatic.
  • Equality slogans are prominent.
  • Human dignity is marketed as universal.

Yet when those values collide with commercial interests or geopolitical alliances, institutions pivot to procedural defensiveness.

The effect is cumulative.

If sport repeatedly signals — through sponsorship, sanctions, and speech regulation — that certain moral concerns are negotiable while others trigger decisive action, it contributes to a global hierarchy of value.

And hierarchies of human value are the structural foundation upon which racism operates.

The GAA controversy therefore is not peripheral. It illustrates how even culturally rooted sporting bodies can become embedded in global systems where capital and political alignment quietly outrank proclaimed solidarity.

The Myth That Sport and Politics Are Separate

Whenever these contradictions surface, the familiar refrain appears: “Keep politics out of sport.”

This position is unsustainable.

  • Politics determines:
  • Tournament hosts.
  • Ownership structures.
  • Sponsorship relationships.
  • Sanctions regimes.
  • Which conflicts trigger bans.
  • Which conflicts are absorbed as background noise.

The awarding of the 2026 FIFA World Cup to the United States was not apolitical. It was a geopolitical decision shaped by commercial and diplomatic considerations.

The United States has a documented history of racial terror, including the campaigns of the Ku Klux Klan. Former President Donald Trump remains a polarizing political figure facing civil judgments and legal proceedings while retaining influence.

When political actors propose alternative diplomatic mechanisms (Board of Peace) that appear to sideline institutions such as the United Nations, questions of mandate and legitimacy arise. Football governance operates within the same geopolitical ecosystem.

To claim that sport should be separate from politics while federations ban nations selectively, clubs are state-owned (Paris Saint-Germain, Manchester City, Newcastle Utd, Girona FC) sponsorships are geopolitically embedded, and supporter solidarity is fined is not principled. It is naïve.

Sport is not outside politics. It is structured by it.

Infantino, Access, and Moral Flexibility

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has cultivated relationships across political systems, including leaders in Saudi Arabia and Western administrations alike.

If Russia’s invasion triggers exclusion but other devastating military campaigns do not, the principle appears flexible. If supporter banners are punished while state participation is protected, neutrality appears selective.

Selective neutrality is alignment.

The Structural Nature of Recurrence

If:
 
  • Political discourse normalizes racialized hierarchies,
  • Governments align with controversial military campaigns,
  • Clubs discipline political speech selectively,
  • Federations apply sanctions unevenly,
  • Sponsorship ethics yield to commercial necessity,
  • Institutions retreat into procedural language when values are tested,

then racist abuse in stadiums is not shocking. It is structurally predictable.

Each incident involving Vinícius is treated as a scandal. Yet governance structures remain intact. Fines are absorbed. Campaigns are refreshed. Optics are managed.

The system endures.

The Core Crisis

When José Mourinho invoked Eusébio in discussions about racism, it evoked a revered Black icon of European football history. But referencing historic greatness does not resolve contemporary systemic discrimination.

Celebrating past Black excellence while failing to protect present Black players risks transforming anti-racism into symbolism rather than substance.

The frustration surrounding racist incidents is not only about individual wrongdoing. It is about accumulated contradiction.

Football presents itself as universal and inclusive. Yet it operates within — and often reinforces — systems marked by selective moral application and hierarchies of value.

The stadium reflects society’s power structures. The tragedy is not merely that racist abuse happens. It is that it happens within a global sporting order that repeatedly signals — through action more than words — that some lives, some conflicts, and some solidarities matter more than others.

Until values are enforced consistently — across nations, across conflicts, across speech, across sponsorship — incidents like those faced by Vinícius will not feel exceptional. They will feel inevitable.

⏩ Cam Ogie is a Gaelic games enthusiast.

The Predictable Scandal 🪶 Racism, Power, And The Structural Hypocrisy Of Modern Football

Common DreamsWritten by Olivia Rosane.

Making the film taught Martin that “it is completely undeniable” that the US military “is the greatest threat to all living things on Earth.”

It’s a commonly repeated statistic that the US military is the world’s largest institutional polluter, but what exactly does that mean?

The quest to find a real answer to that question led journalist and documentary filmmaker Abby Martin and her husband and co-director Mike Prysner on a five-year journey from defense contractor conferences and international climate gatherings to the Rim of the Pacific military training exercises and the fight against the construction of a military base in Okinawa that would fill in its iconic Oura Bay.

The result is Earth’s Greatest Enemy, released this year independently through Martin and Prysner’s own Empire Files, with editing by Taylor Gill and an original score by Anahedron. The film uses personal narrative, research, investigative reporting, interviews, and live footage to detail all the ways in which the Pentagon poisons the planet, including greenhouse gas emissions, the ecocide of war, and the toxins left behind long after the fighting has stopped."When you combine all of this, it is completely undeniable that this force that is upheld by extreme violence is the greatest threat to all living things on Earth,” Martin told Common Dreams.

Continue @ Common Dreams.

Abby Martin’s New Documentary Takes On ‘Earth’s Greatest Enemy’

Anthony McIntyre  Local political representative Joanna Byrne is to be commended for refusing to go silently into the night. 

When the Board at Drogheda United told her that her position as joint Club chairperson was untenable because she had called for Ireland not to play Israel in a Nation's League match, she exposed its perfidy. 

Ms Byrne merely stated of the FAI that:

It appears that their morals, and principled position, was only on paper – not in actions where it counts . . . Israel should not be in this competition.

Hardly controversial, it is consistent with having argued against teams playing Nazi Germany while it was murdering Jewish people and others during its own genocide.
 
Joanna Byrne is a Sinn Fein TD, and made her call for the match not to go ahead in her capacity as the party's spokesperson on sport, not as Drogheda United Joint Chair. It is often said that politics should not interfere with sports. Here we have what on the surface appears to be sport trying to interfere with politics, although at a deeper level it is clear that the Board's behaviour is not about sport at all and is more about wealth and political choices. Joanna Byrne is quite entitled as a political representative to speak publicly about the issues of the day free from punitive actions from other bodies she belongs to. In her role as TD she represents the constituency not the Board. The Board, not elected by the Constituency, has no right to interfere in the work that her constituency has elected her to perform.

She is not trying to drag Drogheda United into politics. Her public comments have not been about what Drogheda Utd should be doing but about what the FAI and the Irish national team should be doing. She made that very clear in her comment that:

It is profoundly hurtful that expressing a moral view – one shared by the majority of Irish football fans – has led to this approach despite me never referencing the club at any stage whilst doing so.

Recently while canvassing for Catherine Conolly at the ground, I and a companion were approached by Ms Byrne and asked would we move outside club property if we wished to hand out flyers. We did as requested. It was clear to us that while Joanna Byrne politically favoured Catherine Connolly for the presidency, she wanted to keep the ground neutral. Last summer when I approached her about accessibility to the ground for a number of Palestinian refugees so that they could watch a soccer match she positively responded, but her action was humanitarian not political.

In a statement that does nothing to inspire confidence the Board of Directors claimed that "at this time, no changes have been made to the club's board". That allows for an inference that at another time Joanna Byrne will be forced out. 

Bill Shankly, the iconic Scot who managed Liverpool, famously quipped that football is not a matter of life and death, it is much more serious than that. Indeed it is - where one team represents a genocidal state and society it is deeply serious, and societal attitudes to it should not be swayed by money. 

As a friend from Belfast said to me last evening in a text message:

Commentator on Raidió na Gaeltachta now asking if there is any room for a moral stance in sport any more. The only conclusion you can draw is that money is more important. We're living in horrible times. It appears there's no room for racism in sport unless you're representing a country that slaughtered the bulk of a hundred thousand Palestinians, and the genocide continues.

As a Drogheda United season ticket holder who writes a match report after every home game, if Joanna Byrne is forced out I will not set foot inside the stadium again, unless and until she returns to her position. I will opt to watch the Drogs for the sake of the players - who bear no responsibility in this situation - only at some away games. I stand fully with Joanna Byrne and stand equally fully against the Board of Bollixes who have sought to silence her ethical opposition to genocide. 

The Board should take an early shower, not Joanna Byrne. Even if its members use the BDS disapproved Head and Shoulders shampoo, she still stands head and shoulders above them.

Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre.

No Red Card For Joanna Byrne

Ukraine Solidarity Group ✊ A Digest of News from Ukrainian Sources ⚔ 26 January-2026.

In this week’s bulletin

 The unachievable peace.
⬤ Wild capitalism in Kyiv/.
⬤ Limits to Russian mobilisation.
⬤ Volunteering in Ukraine at war.
⬤ UN denounces blackout bombing.
⬤ Left accommodation to partition.
⬤ Russian torture and war crimes.
 ⬤ French unions’ solidarity with Ukraine.

News from the territories occupied by Russia

Three years in a penal isolator (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 24th)

Nine suspects in the case of Vilen Temerianov (Crimea Human Rights Group, 23 January)

Brutal 12-year ‘treason’ sentences against Crimean woman with MS and her daughter, seized while her baby was in intensive care (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 23rd)

Face of Resistance: The Story of Crimean Tatar Political Prisoner Seiran Khairetdinov (Crimea Platform, January 23rd)

‘In the evening, your flag was hanging. In the morning, I look—it is our flag…’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 22nd)

ECHR Rules Russia Violated Right to Peaceful Assembly in Crimea (Crimea Platform, January 21st)

No mercy for dying Crimean Tatar civic activist imprisoned for reporting Russian repression (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 21st)

Weekly update on the situation in occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, January 20th)

Preschool teacher abducted by the Russians, tortured and sentenced to 6 years for her refusal to betray Ukraine’ (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 20th)

Russia sentences three Ukrainian women to 12 years for supporting Ukraine’s defenders (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 19th)

Crimean journalist fined (Crimea Human Rights Group, 14 January)

Life Under Occupation (Alter Pravo, December 2025)

News from Ukraine

Interview with Daria Saburova: volunteering in wartime Ukraine (Posle.Media, 21 January)

Stand with Ukraine Through Darkness (Russian Reader, January 21st)

Without Hope for Revival? Why Maternity Hospitals Are Disappearing in Ukraine (Commons.com, January 21st)

Half of Kyiv without heating after Russian attack (Ukrainska Pravda, January 20th)

Kyiv in crisis: how wild capitalism is exacerbating devastation (International Viewpoint, January 19th)

Russia’s war on Ukrainian children (Power Vertical, January 2026)

War-related news from Russia

“It’s best to avoid traveling by train”: Women in Russia’s Belgorod Region face violence from soldiers (The Insider, January 23rd)

Inside the only uncensored news outlet in Russia’s war-torn border regions (Meduza, 23 January)

The Kremlin prepares for Chechen dictator’s death (iStories, 23 January)

School grades for ideology and conformity (Meduza, 22 January)

Russia’s “disposable” foreign fighters (Meduza, 22 January)

Deleted court statement admits Russian battleship was hit by missiles (Mediazona, 22 January)

Drunk driving and prostitutes: Members of Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service have taken to denouncing their colleagues (The Insider, January 22nd)

Gazprombank boss’s assets seized in France (iStories, 20 January)

High-ranking post in Russia for soldier accused of grave war crimes in Ukraine (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, January 19th)

Testing the Limits of State-Directed Mobilization (Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, December 15th)

Analysis and comment

The Peace That Cannot Come (Alkweb, January 22nd)

“Solidarity with the resistance of Ukrainian workers!” – Statement from eight French union federations (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, January 22nd)

How European integration can become an instrument for protecting the rights of IDPs and residents of the TOT: ZMINA presented a new analysis (Zmina, January 21st)

Ukraine: Türk outraged by continued Russian attacks on energy infrastructure (UNHCR, January 20th)

How a Section of the Left Accommodated the Partition of Ukraine (Red Mole, January 17th)

Challenges in holding an all-Ukraine referendum (Opora, 5 January)

Upcoming events

Thursday 5th February, 6.30 pm. Try Me For Treason: readings from speeches by anti-war protesters in Russian courts, and discussion. Clore Lecture Theatre, Birkbeck College Clore Management Centre, Torrington Square, London WC1E 7JL. REGISTER to attend here.


🔴This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. More information at Ukraine Information Group.

We are also on twitter. Our aim is to circulate information in English that to the best of our knowledge is reliable. If you have something you think we should include, please send it to 2U022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.


We are now on Facebook and Substack! Please subscribe and tell friends. Better still, people can email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, and we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. The full-scale Russian assault on Ukraine is going into its third year: we’ll keep information and analysis coming, for as long as it takes.

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News From Ukraine 💣 Bulletin 180

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Eighty Eight

 

A Morning Thought @ 3065

Pádraig Drummond ✊ 
Let’s call things what they are, without the waffle and without the slogans.

Right-wing politics in Ireland today is a loose mix of small parties, protest groups, online activists and loudmouths who claim they’re standing up for “ordinary Irish people”. You’ll hear the same lines over and over: Ireland is full, migrants are to blame, elites don’t listen, the nation is under threat. It all sounds fierce and radical, like someone’s finally saying what people are thinking. But once you strip away the shouting and the flags, there’s very little there for working-class communities trying to survive in neoliberal Ireland.

From a traditional revolutionary point of view, politics is meant to be about power, housing, work, dignity and control over our own lives. On those basics, the Irish right wing comes up empty.

Take housing, the biggest crisis in working-class Dublin and across the country. Rents through the roof, families stuck in childhood bedrooms, homelessness becoming normalised. What have these groups actually done? They haven’t built a single house. They haven’t organised tenants. They haven’t fought vulture funds, land hoarders or developers. They haven’t pushed councils to compulsorily purchase land or expand public housing at scale.
 
All they offer is blame. Refugees. Migrants. Anyone weaker than the people actually making money off the crisis. That doesn’t house a single family. It doesn’t lower a single rent. It just divides neighbours against each other while landlords and speculators laugh all the way to the bank.

On workers’ rights, it’s the same story. Big talk about “hard-working Irish people” but no support for trade unions, collective bargaining, sick pay, job security or protections against exploitation. In fact, many of these groups openly sneer at unions as left-wing or foreign. So what exactly are workers meant to do? Clap ourselves into dignity? Real power for working people has always come from our communities through revolutionary organisation, not from shouting at the wrong targets.

The cost-of-living crisis hits hardest where wages are lowest, and housing is least secure. Energy bills, childcare, transport, food. Again, no serious proposals. No plans to cap rents properly. No mass public housing programme. No challenge to corporate profiteering. Just culture war noise and conspiracy talk. It’s politics without solutions, anger without direction.

And here’s the quiet truth that doesn’t get said enough: these groups help Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael stay in power. They split the vote in working-class areas. They pull people away from class-based politics and into sectarian identity traps. Instead of building a united front against landlords, developers and corporate power, they fracture communities along lines of race and nationality. The result is the continuation of the same two parties, year after year, with the same failed housing and economic policies, while pretending there’s no alternative.

Outside of rallies, protests and social media rows, what’s left behind? No community centres. No housing co-ops. No advice clinics. No long-term organising. No legacy. Just burnt-out anger and more disillusionment. People are right to be furious about the state of the country. They’re right to feel abandoned. But being angry isn’t enough. Anger has to be turned into power, and power has to be organised.
Irish republicanism, at its best, was about taking control of our future, not scapegoating the powerless. Socialism is about making sure everyone has a home, a job with dignity, and a life worth living. The far right offers none of that. It offers identity instead of solidarity, blame instead of solutions, and noise instead of change.

Working-class Ireland doesn’t need more division. We need houses built, rents slashed, wages raised, and communities strengthened. At some point, we have to be honest with ourselves and with each other. These right-wing hate parties have nothing positive to offer our communities. No homes, no jobs, no security, no future. All they bring is division, suspicion and neighbour set against neighbour.

That kind of politics weakens us and keeps the real power exactly where it is. Working-class people don’t win by tearing each other apart; we win by standing together. Now more than ever, we need unity, solidarity and a politics that fights for housing, workers’ rights and dignity for all. It’s time to walk away from the dead ends of hate and build something better together.

Pádraig Drummond is an anti-racism activist.

All The Far Right Offer Is Blame

Drogheda Stands With Palestine     will host its weekly vigil tomorrow to demand that the Israeli soccer team be shown the red card.

Date: 21 February 2026

Time: 1200

Venue: West Street 



Show Israel The Red Card

Christopher Owens 🔖 reviews a book on capitalism written by a Leftist but which offers little hope for the Left.

 

I well remember the dismay of the comrade charged with getting me through volume one of . . . Capital: A Critique of Political Economy . . . during a discussion of advertising . . . This led me off . . . to an expression of my delight at . . . one set in Smarties Place, an imaginary night club for kids . . . in which 10 year olds were served cocktail glasses full of multi-coloured chocolate Smarties . . . My delight in describing the ad invited an expression of confused disdain.

Probably not the best thing for a communist to admit to in 1981, but then Don Milligan is used to upsetting people.

A former member of CPGB, Workers Fight and the Revolutionary Communist Party as well as a veteran gay rights campaigner, Milligan is in a unique position to discuss why revolution seems further away than ever.

Ostensibly emerging from two essays available on his website, Milligan peppers the book with his own history, such as being arrested for rioting in protest over the execution of Patrice Lumumba through to being disciplined by fellow International Socialists comrades for focusing on gay liberation instead of class politics, to show how the British left has evolved over the last 60 odd years.

And what a journey.

From the layers of confusion as to what constitutes a commercial society as most capitalists seem to be just as much victims of unseen forces (such as globalisation) as employees, old oligarchies feeling the mismatch between themselves and the masses, the difficulty of theoretical differences between productive and unproductive labour, retreating into a mythological realm and the last outburst of class politics of industrial action in the 70’s.

Combine the above with a never-ending parade of theories that do not appeal to the working class (Proudhon may not have been discussing farms and small shops when he described property as being theft but how do you square such thinking with indigenous people wanting their land back) and we can see how some develop the idea of false consciousness.

As you can tell, it’s a dense read which packs an awful lot into its 150-pages. As a result, it’s not one for the casual reader and is bound to annoy a wide spectrum of left-wing activists, but, crucially, Milligan refuses to throw the baby out with the bathwater by wanting to move beyond such trains of thought like:

Traditionally, the left has banked on the dysfunction of capitalism, of the failure of its ‘countervailing tendencies,’ and of the collapse of commerce in a welter of mass unemployment . . . It is often hoped, against all historical evidence to the contrary, that upheaval and economic crisis will improve the prospects of the left. It never has, and probably never will . . . Commercial society will not stand still for us; it is a perpetually moving target.”

Don Milligan, 2022, The Embrace of Capital: Capitalism from the Inside, Zero Books. ISBN-13: 978-1789048018

⏩ Christopher Owens was a reviewer for Metal Ireland and finds time to study the history and inherent contradictions of Ireland. He is currently the TPQ Friday columnist and is the author of A Vortex of Securocrats and “dethrone god”.

The Embrace of Capital 📚 Capitalism From The Inside

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Eighty Seven

 

A Morning Thought @ 3064

Frankie Quinn with a poem from his expansive body of work. 

Who Remembers Them?

The soldiers hide behind curtains laced stoned faced.
Where sun doesn’t shine. Their mind all frayed
The faces lined, tangled with barbed wire and strife,
Where was their life but hiding under ditches?
While others slept in comfortable style
They waited for the Saracen’s roar, creamery cans
Filled to brim, not with milk but benzine mix.
No one wants to embrace their troubled mind.
♞♜♝
It’s now seen as the past. But not with them
They are still in that prison den with the din of
Batton cracks on necks the strip search to
Invade your personal space your hidden,
Private place no longer exists taken by mirrors and nips.
The clips that bounce around your feet brass shells
Do not penetrate these cells locked behind steel doors.
As devils march on polished floors.
♞♜♝
The roars, the scars and crippling sores, they heal.
But the unravelling mind in its turmoil still he hears the shots.
That skimmed past his ear and ended in a comrade’s
Head, foreigners lead pierced, he’s dead. 
So, when he walks alone. 
Still and stout be in no doubt within him a screaming pain, 
how can he accept the rules of society’s tools to make you obey?
And conform to the norm. Move on they say well take one day.
Inside his head he wishes was filled with lead, with comrades dead.
♞♜♝
So, as you criticize the soldier now alone, 
peering from a window.
With no flowers but stone. 
Remember once he was ours, to call upon. 
For inner strength, 
to protect you all from them kicking in doors. 
The marauder, the squaddies who cracked his head, he stood
♞♜♝
Strong when needed to, 
now as he passes you barely remembered 
Sacrificed his life, 
it was never his but yours 
his choices were never made. 
To run he stood to fight the Hun
but destabilised his mind with SLR’s and lights
at night they interrogate his dreams, 
he screams. 
No one there to hear his call clutching head, void of lead, tears instead.
♞♜♝
Who now hears his call for help, no one dears embrace his pain?
In case it starts all over again. 
It wasn’t him the bin lids loud din.
But the enemy at your door. 
Between you and death’s gate he stood
tall and proud and shouted loud No 
we will stand on our land and fight for what is right. 
Our sovereign right to wear the green to be proud of Connolly’s men. 
To stand beside Clarke and the likes. 
The soft spoken Granda with child on his knee, 
never smiles or laughs you see. 
But do you ever remember Who stood between you and them, 
then rotted in that prison den?

⏩ Frankie Quinn is a former republican prisoner who is now a community activist. He is the author of Open Gates, a book of poetry.   

Who Remembers Them?

Caoimhin O’Muraile ⚽ On 24th February 2024 Jim Ratciffe, CEO and founder of INEOS petrochemicals, paid £1.25 billion to purchase a 27.7% share in Manchester United. 

He bought these shares off the Glazers whose ownership legally of the club is questionable. The overall owners are still the Glazers but Ratcliffe through his purchasing of this sizeable chunk is in charge of all matters relating to football. The Glazers look after the other aspects of the business, like commercialisation and the sales of merchandise, increasing their profits but not necessarily the good of the club. Incidentally the Glazers have reportedly taken £1 billion out of United since 2005 in various consultancy fees, though what these consultancies are is unclear! 

Ratcliffe is now part of this gang of brigands with the Glazers who arguably acted unlawfully at the 2004 Annual General Meeting (AGM) remaining the majority shareholders. Since his visage crossed the door at Old Trafford Ratcliffe has embarked on an orgy of butchery regarding job cuts. He has cut 450 jobs in total and that is only so far, the majority of them low paid in the catering side of the business. John Allen who worked heading the communications team had worked at United for 25 years has also lost his job leaving this loyal supporter of the team in tears. Ratcliffe has closed the staff canteen, and lunches once provided by the club have been replaced by portions of fruit! 

The legality of this move again is questionable because employers are obliged under the Health, Safety and Welfare Regulations 1992, to ‘provide suitable rest areas and facilities for workers to eat and drink, especially if they cannot leave the site’. No doubt United employees were free to leave Old Trafford during their lunch breaks but for those who did not use this option have the said facilities been provided? Either way the self-styled United fan, as Jim Ratcliffe claims to be, has denied 450 people the right to earn a living at the club many loved! 

As for Ratcliffe’s claim to be a lifelong fan (short for fanatic) I have never seen him at a game. I, and many others, attended over five decades, four of them home away and abroad (the sixties being my debut decade with parents) and not a sighting of Ratcliffe. Those of us who travelled to every game got to know each other as fans from Newcastle to Torquay with Manchester as the hub, regularly shared pubs and places on the terracing and sometimes police cells! Jim Ratcliffe, the lifelong supporter nobody who I know has ever seen was not one of these fans. Even if he was a home supporter only somebody would have spotted him it would be thought. I remember Maurice Watkins, the former club Solicitor and Board Member, who, like Ratcliffe, claimed to have been a lifelong ‘fan’ of United. He regularly boasted of that night at Wembley in 1968 defeating Benfica to lift the European Cup and his presence at the game, lucky bastard. Despite his attendance at one match, albeit an important one, he was never seen at matches, as a fan not a Board Member, away from Old Trafford. When the price was right Watkins, like Roy Gardner another Board Member, sold his shares unashamedly to the Glazers! These parasites are not fans but, at best, passing supporters of the club. The Gazers and Ratcliffe have managed to separate the club from the team making it possible to love and support the team but not the club!

If people like Ratcliffe and Watkins before him were really fans of United they would act in the team’s and the fans’ interests and not their own financial gain. Matt Busby’s fears about the interests of football being “sacrificed on the altar of big business” have come to pass alas. 

The only people Ratcliffe and Watkins are fans of is themselves and their pockets. “Football without fans is nothing” is another Matt Busby core belief and the Glazers have reduced the fans status at Old Trafford to that of “customers”. Ratcliffe has outsourced the catering and entered talks with Levy Catering, part of the Compass group where he was once a Board member some years ago. 

John Allen, the Communications Officer, said on hearing of his departure pausing to hold back the tears; “it has been the biggest honour coming from Manchester to work with all these managers”. He continued; “This is my club and to be able to do this, I am very lucky”. John worked in the ticket office before moving to communications and has given his club years of loyal service. John doesn’t know why he has to leave; he is just one of those employees who Ratcliffe has decided have to go to trim the ‘wage bill’. 

Club historian, Cliff Butler, is another stalwart who has fallen victim to Ratcliffe’s axe as has Alex Wylie after 40 years as kitmen. Both were important positions at the club Ratcliffe deems have to go. ‘Emotional goodbyes are being replicated all over the club while other members of staff are having their workloads, in some cases, doubled,’ they should refuse to carry out these extra tasks. That’s business Ratcliffe might say, but is this not sacrificing the interests of the club and football on the “altar of big business”? Lifelong fan my arse.

In the Irish Daily Mirror on Thursday 12 February sub headlined; “SIR JIM: MY CALLS NOW PAYING OFF”. Ratcliffe says in this short but significant article; “Well, I’ve been very unpopular at Manchester United because we’ve made lots of changes. But for the better, in my view”.

“And I think we’re beginning to see some evidence in the Football Club that that’s (sic) beginning to pay off”.

During Ratcliffe’s tenure at Old Trafford United have sacked two managers, Erik Ten Hag who despite winning the League Cup and FA Cup was sacked. He was succeeded by Ruben Amorim who spoke out against those above him, in my view not before time, and he was dismissed for his troubles, though his results on the field were not great! Where the fuck are the managers trade union, the League Managers Association, while managers, not only at Man Utd but elsewhere, are being sacrificed almost on a weekly ritual like lambs to the slaughter? Reading Ratcliffe’s statement about “some evidence in the Football Club that that’s beginning to pay off” suggests he is trying to take some sort of credit for the team’s recent success under interim boss, Michael Carrick and his backroom team. 

This success is despite, not because of Ratcliffe’s presence at Old Trafford as he like the overall owners, the Gazers, are not wanted at Man Utd by most supporters and, perhaps if they told the truth, many employees! 

If Ratcliffe is trying in some way to tell the world that him cutting low paid jobs to cut the wage bill has in some way contributed to the good work of Michael Carrick and his team producing results on the pitch, defeating City, Arsenal, Fulham, and Tottenham while drawing away at West Ham then he, Ratcliffe, is a cheeky, arrogant self-centred narcissist to say nothing of being delusional. He should fuck off back to petrochemicals and take the Glazers with him. A vat of cleansing solvent sounds a tributing place for these parasites!

Caoimhin O’Muraile is Independent Socialist Republican and Marxist.


The Cheeky Arrogant, Narcissistic, Delusional Bastard!