Monday, 28 July 2014
Nationalist Agitators Terrorise Scots
As Alistair Darling was stating in the Scotsman that the Nationalists would become increasingly desperate in the weeks leading up to the referendum, he wasn’t joking, although it is probably worth expanding on the type of desperate measures that they will take to bully their way to a Yes vote.
While the more streetwise unionist may be able to read between the lines, I’d say that the upcoming referendum is far too important to dance around the edges of what needs said, so here’s my plain English interpretation of Darling’s message, with the added bonus of my own warnings from personal experience, and experiences of other unionists.
-You will be lied to. OK, many of you will say that’s nothing new, but you should take absolutely everything with a pinch of salt, and double check any assertion made by any nationalist.
-Do not assume that “cybernats” are an out of control minority of extremists that the SNP have zero connection to. While the most offensive of the apparently full time agitators are a small number, a surprising number of SNP MSPs and councillors have little or no decorum online (including John Mason and John Menzies), and the party itself does little to distance itself from agitators such as Wings over Scotland’s Stuart Campbell, or Chris Darroch.
-If you have a paid job, and are openly unionist and pro active in debate and discussion on social media, such as Facebook or Twitter, some of the more hate filled nationalists are trolling personal information, and will have no issues with threatening yourself or your family. They are contacting employers. Just last night one well known Unionist on Twitter was thrown to the wolves by a nationalist who published said unionist’s employment information, with a plea for his twitter followers to contact the employer
You will probably find that those cyber bullies either do not have obvious employment, and are either “self employed”, or are mysteriously funded. You should be very careful with your personal data across all social media and networking websites. Don’t let any bully try and force you out of employment.
-As seen in the protest against the BBC on Sunday, the bullies and agitators have moved on from unionists to neutrals or undecideds. Apparently, because the BBC has the audacity to use some English presenters on its network coverage of the Commonwealth Games, and hasn’t fully jumped in to the Yes camp it is biased. Normal people will see that the BBC is a British organisation, with hundreds of Clyde based employees at risk from an iScotland, and it’s presenters and guests on the Games showcasing Glasgow to the world in a manner we should all be proud of. So, the agitators will try and bully broadcasters to be less neutral and less likely to tell you the truth. Heaven forbid the BBC make Glasgow look welcoming and progressive. Perhaps the extremist bullies would rather the event be held in a nationalist stronghold* and broadcast by STV to 3 men and a dug.
-While you may play along with the spirit of not politicising Commonwealth events, don’t be surprised when numbers of attendees are mysteriously seen circulating around events wearing not just Yes attire, but Saltires adorned by Yes.
If you do find yourself the victim of cyberbullying, real bullying and intimidation, or vandalism, please do not suffer in silence. Shout it from the rooftops.
If you don’t know how, contact me, and I will assist.
*I would name a stronghold, but there isn’t one. The nats have a real hatred for Glasgow as it is seen as a Unionist stronghold, but cities such as Aberdeen and Edinburgh are not nationalist hotspots either. Notably, the three cities of Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen are Scotland’s most diverse, and Scotland’s financial powerhouses.
Bill
Thursday, 24 July 2014
#Glasgow2014
I never thought I would find myself writing about the Commonwealth Games Opening Ceremony at Celtic Park, but the spectacle last night was one of the most bizarre pieces of both “entertainment” and broadcasting I’ve ever seen.
The aerial shots of Celtic Park by an over excited BBC team, offered a stark reminder that Glasgow City Council have demolished thousands of people’s perfectly good homes over the last 20 years, bringing us to the point that they can enable a vision of a Celtic Village to become reality.
I was half expecting a commentary of “That’s where London Road School use to be, that’s where Janefield Street used to be, that’s where Rangers legend Ian Ferguson was brought up, and that’s where London Road and Springfield Road used to have tenements. They were fully renovated in the 80s, and mysteriously demolished less than a decade later”
Then I woke up, and realised that it was the BBC, so instead we got treated to a helicopter flyover with the BBC’s Chris McLaughlin, who proceeded to fly over all games venues except Ibrox, and tell watching millions that the East End of Glasgow was where millions of Irish famine refugees settled.
Chris, who spent the best part of his sports reporter role in front of Ibrox while reporting on “sectarianism”, somehow couldn’t find Ibrox, despite the helipad being approximately 10 seconds away from the south side home of Scotland’s most successful football team.
Then we had the spectacle of the baton arriving up the Clyde, to the BBC just 5 minutes from Ibrox, and mysteriously appearing at Celtic park at the other end of the city.
Make no mistake, Ibrox was never going to feature on this BBC broadcast
When the actual ceremony started, chins dropped across Scotland as we realised that BBC Scotland must surely have been involved in it too, as Z list BBC celeb Karen Dunbar proved that not only can she not act, she can’t sing either. Perhaps John Barrowman chose her to try and make him look better.
Of course, when the stick started to fly at the twee tartanfest from social media, it wasn’t the appalling Dunbar that took the brunt, but the openly unionist Barrowman. Perhaps that was just a coincidence. Just like someone forgot to put the Celtic FC lights off that kept appearing on the panoramic shots.
As Rod Stewart took to the stage, to be followed by Subo, I decided that perhaps miming isn’t so bad after all.
Rod should stick to Vegas. If they’ll have him.
With Primal Scream set to do the closing ceremony, perhaps the “big” acts all have to be Celtic supporters too.
So, with Rangers fans challenging Glasgow City council over a stunning set of questionable decisions and transactions, the organisers of the £600M games had the brass neck to ask viewers to donate to charity, from a football field being replaced at a cost of £1.8M after the games. You couldn’t make this up.
In any other country the locals would be rioting. In this country we meekly accept it and buy in to the hype. If James McAvoy isn’t ashamed to stand in Celtic Park asking us to put Children First, we should be embarrassed that no-one in this country will mention both the costs of the games, and the fact McAvoy is standing in a ground of a football club that covered up the sexual abuse of children for two decades
Then we have Alex Salmond grandstanding despite claiming the games were not to be politicised, claiming Glasgow will be Freedom City after September.
News for you Alex, we became free 324 years ago.
Straight after Salmond came Glasgow City Council’s favourite Linn Park dog walker Gordon Matheson, who did his best to sound like a Glaswegian Ned Dalek. Ed Milliband must have looked on and despaired at this performance, which included a veiled Irish Republican reference that “our day has come”.
We truly have the most vile politicians possible in Scotland.
So, with the low lights out of the way, it’s on to the highlights, with the Queen enjoying a rousing rendition of the national anthem, and the red Arrows billowing their trademark red, white and blue trails.
With the highlights out of the way, we find out today that numerous nationalists and republicans are incensed at the National Anthem getting an outing at Celtic Park, and that the Red Arrows ignored nationalist intervention to ditch the red smoke.
It is clear indeed that Scotland is at a crossroads. The vast majority of the good people of Scotland don’t deserve to have these people dictating everything in our lives.
Once the referendum is out of the way, and the Nationalists implode, it’s up to us, the majority, to ensure that this low place we find ourselves at is ground zero, and we start to change this country from the ground up.
Bill
The aerial shots of Celtic Park by an over excited BBC team, offered a stark reminder that Glasgow City Council have demolished thousands of people’s perfectly good homes over the last 20 years, bringing us to the point that they can enable a vision of a Celtic Village to become reality.
I was half expecting a commentary of “That’s where London Road School use to be, that’s where Janefield Street used to be, that’s where Rangers legend Ian Ferguson was brought up, and that’s where London Road and Springfield Road used to have tenements. They were fully renovated in the 80s, and mysteriously demolished less than a decade later”
Then I woke up, and realised that it was the BBC, so instead we got treated to a helicopter flyover with the BBC’s Chris McLaughlin, who proceeded to fly over all games venues except Ibrox, and tell watching millions that the East End of Glasgow was where millions of Irish famine refugees settled.
Chris, who spent the best part of his sports reporter role in front of Ibrox while reporting on “sectarianism”, somehow couldn’t find Ibrox, despite the helipad being approximately 10 seconds away from the south side home of Scotland’s most successful football team.
Then we had the spectacle of the baton arriving up the Clyde, to the BBC just 5 minutes from Ibrox, and mysteriously appearing at Celtic park at the other end of the city.
Make no mistake, Ibrox was never going to feature on this BBC broadcast
When the actual ceremony started, chins dropped across Scotland as we realised that BBC Scotland must surely have been involved in it too, as Z list BBC celeb Karen Dunbar proved that not only can she not act, she can’t sing either. Perhaps John Barrowman chose her to try and make him look better.
Of course, when the stick started to fly at the twee tartanfest from social media, it wasn’t the appalling Dunbar that took the brunt, but the openly unionist Barrowman. Perhaps that was just a coincidence. Just like someone forgot to put the Celtic FC lights off that kept appearing on the panoramic shots.
As Rod Stewart took to the stage, to be followed by Subo, I decided that perhaps miming isn’t so bad after all.
Rod should stick to Vegas. If they’ll have him.
With Primal Scream set to do the closing ceremony, perhaps the “big” acts all have to be Celtic supporters too.
So, with Rangers fans challenging Glasgow City council over a stunning set of questionable decisions and transactions, the organisers of the £600M games had the brass neck to ask viewers to donate to charity, from a football field being replaced at a cost of £1.8M after the games. You couldn’t make this up.
In any other country the locals would be rioting. In this country we meekly accept it and buy in to the hype. If James McAvoy isn’t ashamed to stand in Celtic Park asking us to put Children First, we should be embarrassed that no-one in this country will mention both the costs of the games, and the fact McAvoy is standing in a ground of a football club that covered up the sexual abuse of children for two decades
Then we have Alex Salmond grandstanding despite claiming the games were not to be politicised, claiming Glasgow will be Freedom City after September.
News for you Alex, we became free 324 years ago.
Straight after Salmond came Glasgow City Council’s favourite Linn Park dog walker Gordon Matheson, who did his best to sound like a Glaswegian Ned Dalek. Ed Milliband must have looked on and despaired at this performance, which included a veiled Irish Republican reference that “our day has come”.
We truly have the most vile politicians possible in Scotland.
So, with the low lights out of the way, it’s on to the highlights, with the Queen enjoying a rousing rendition of the national anthem, and the red Arrows billowing their trademark red, white and blue trails.
With the highlights out of the way, we find out today that numerous nationalists and republicans are incensed at the National Anthem getting an outing at Celtic Park, and that the Red Arrows ignored nationalist intervention to ditch the red smoke.
It is clear indeed that Scotland is at a crossroads. The vast majority of the good people of Scotland don’t deserve to have these people dictating everything in our lives.
Once the referendum is out of the way, and the Nationalists implode, it’s up to us, the majority, to ensure that this low place we find ourselves at is ground zero, and we start to change this country from the ground up.
Bill
Monday, 19 May 2014
“Spanish Banjo” Clarification
I am informed this morning I have my fifteen minutes of fame on Follow Follow, where a poster called “Spanish Banjo” has claimed that “Vanwigs campaigned against the RST and Mark Dingwall throughout Administration in the form of two blogs. William Poole and Wee Proclaimer”
Firstly, I blog for me and no one else, and I am not a member of any fans forums.
I also do not know who "The Wee Proclaimer" is.
The only fans forum I have ever applied to join was Follow Follow, and my application was refused.
You can draw your own conclusions from that.
I may blog irregularly, but I have blogged on a number of Rangers related issues, including exposes of The SFA, the SPL, “journalists” Alex Thomson and Roy Greenslade, and the SPFA.
Before today I had done 106 blog posts, and without trolling my own blog, my recollection is that I blogged about the RST’s doomed Save Rangers “scheme” once, and blogged about issues associated to the trust on one other occasion, with the other 100 or so blog posts being about general Rangers issues, and agendas against the club.
Whatever that number of RST posts may be it is miniscule, and absolutely not the raison d'etre of my blog
I have a simple philosophy, I write about issues that I believe need written about.
I gave up the blog for some time due to other committments and semi jokingly offered via my Twitter account to write for other Rangers websites. The only offer that came in was from the owner of the Copland Road blog, which I didn't refuse, but I didn't accept either.
I have never written for anyone else other than a guest blog for a unionist site.
I like having my own blog, and I like writing independently, and actually have no interest in writing for anyone else, or handing over editorial control to anyone else.
I will continue to blog irregeularly on topics that deserve to be written about.
I would prefer not to write ever about Rangers fans, which is evident in the archives of my blog.
Unfortunately, there are some in the Rangers support more interested in their own agendas than they are about the betterment of Rangers. When they put their own agenda ahead of that of the club they should be challenged.
Bill
Friday, 18 April 2014
apology
I have deleted this morning's blog post.
Contrary to information I had used in good faith from a trusted contact, both Craig Houston and Chris Graham have denied being offered positions at Rangers.
I will trust them on their word.
I therefore apologise.
Statement Ends.
Bill.
Contrary to information I had used in good faith from a trusted contact, both Craig Houston and Chris Graham have denied being offered positions at Rangers.
I will trust them on their word.
I therefore apologise.
Statement Ends.
Bill.
Monday, 24 March 2014
Easdale – Call a Halt and Get Round a Table
As The Daily Record reports that Rangers Director Sandy Easdale is set to sue Craig Houston of the Sons of Struth, it serves as a very high profile reminder that the relationship between the club, and certain anti board activists is at an all-time low.
While the anti-board activists have behaved in a despicable manner through various incarnations, I believe firmly that Easdale should not be acting. Yet.
The fact he is, for me, rings major alarm bells.
While his alleged legal action is in his own name, I believe that Graham Wallace, on behalf of the club, should have persuaded him to desist. At least for now.
Wallace, after all, is nearing completion of his 120 day review of the club’s operations, and should therefore be in a position to finally offer the kind of clarity on the recent past and on plans for the future that the Anti-board activists have been asking for all along.
If the plan is strong enough to stand behind, then the whole board should be primed to do just that, and if it is a review and plan of substance and credibility then the Anti-board activists will have to accept that it is time they stood down and backed the board.
Despite bluster to the contrary, following King’s meeting with the board, the self-styled “union of fans” agreed to allow the board to complete the 120 day review.
This means that they can back down if Dave King tells them to do so.
This is all supposition of course, but if the current board’s “plan” was rock solid, and several Rangers supporting individuals persisted in attempts to destabilise the board, by whichever means at their disposal, then frankly, I would expect the club to take action.
As it stands though, the club has made no effort to communicate to fans and the 120 day review isn’t complete.
A cynic might say that the club could in theory be taking action against Houston to silence critics ahead of the publication of the review and what may be in it.
That’s why, despite me believing that Houston and several individuals pulling his strings are in some way deserving of their current predicament due to their conduct, the club, and Easdale, are not winning over friends by silencing him the wrong way. The right way, clearly, is to give all Rangers fans confidence that the club is being managed properly, and has a robust plan to build for the future.
Houston, for his part, would have a greater chance of support from the wider fan base had he not disrespected any Rangers supporter asking questions, slated other Rangers supporters in the national press, or misled supporters about the involvement of Malcolm Murray in discussions about the Sons of Struth.
The quote from him in today’s Record that “I’ve made his lawyers aware of similar posts on three other forums”, should ring alarm bells for any supporters of SoS who may have been caught up in the hype. One would hope that it is not Rangers fans on Rangers forums that Houston is grassing up to save his own skin.
Neither side are acting in a matter befitting Rangers, and I for one would be angered if some suggestions for RFFF money to be used to fund Houston’s legal defence, were approved.
This money, which was raised in good faith by the support during the summer of 2012, should not be used to support an individual fighting Rangers directors. The suggestion is absurd.
While Houston looks to have been pushed under the bus by other anti-board activists, one would expect that they personally should fund his defence, and not leave him on the streets for fighting their cause. If, for instance, the RST can raise funds of £1.5M to “loan” to the club, then they can afford to foot Houston’s legal bills.
This whole episode is unedifying but the most worrying aspect for me is the club’s apparent lack of confidence that the 120 day review and subsequent plan isn’t strong enough to silence even the strongest critics.
In some ways the legalities of some dodgy allegations on a Facebook page are an unwelcome side show and I hope they don’t’ overshadow the most important business review in the recent history of the club. That review is where all eyes should be focused.
Bill.
Friday, 21 March 2014
Don’t Be Conned
As younger voters become turned off by the Independence Referendum, this should ring the largest alarm bells with Better Together.
As BBC Scotland and STV and the Scottish media pummel the public in Scotland, the saturation of the airwaves of the “arguments” between the Nationalists and Unionists is irritating enough for me as someone with a keen interest in both maintaining the union, and challenging many of the lies u-turns and misleading statements from the SS (SalmondSturgeon) Party.
My view is that the Yes campaign are not only trying to con the public in to voting for them, but also trying to con Better Together to change their campaigning strategy.
Quite rightly, the Better Together Campaign has challenged many of the Yes Campaign’s lies and u-turns, and shown that there is no sensible basis for separation at all.
After months of disproving and dismantling every “yes” argument, the Nat whiners have decided to change tact and deflect from this by complaining that the “No” campaign is too negative.
While some unionists appear to have accepted that assertion and are set to focus only on selling the good things about the Union, I believe firmly that they cannot stop also challenging the relentless Yes campaign’s questionable claims and assertions.
Take this example of one of the latest opinion polls, from the Panelbase website inaccurately reporting that the Yes campaign are now polling circa 40%.
This is a report in the Scotsman
http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/top-stories/scottish-independence-panelbase-poll-boosts-yes-1-3347389
“A total of 40% of Scots say they will vote Yes, according to the poll conducted by Panelbase for Newsnet Scotland. That figure is just 5% behind those who say they will vote No. There are still 15% of Scots who are undecided, according to the poll.
The five-point gap is down from 12 points on a previous Panelbase poll last month which had Yes on 37%, with No on 49%.
The latest poll suggests that excluding ‘don’t knows’, support for Yes has reached 47% with No on 53%. The results suggest a swing of just three points is needed to put Yes ahead in September.”
Actually the Panelbase poll did not say that in the slightest
The actual poll percentage for “Yes” was 38%, but the results show a Raw figure, and also a weighted figure. Guess which figure was issued in the Press Release to Reuters from the nationalist website newsnet Scotland? Yes, that would be the weighted one.
http://www.panelbase.com/media/polls/NewsnetScotlandPollv3.pdf
It should also be noted that excluding “don’t knows” skews the figures
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/faq-dont-knows
Notice that the Panelbase poll also suggest that of those interviewed 35% voted SNP at the last election. Remember that the SNP actually returned 22% of the vote at the last election.
Note also that Panelbase have conducted polls for nationalist leaning websites, including extremists “Wings Over Scotland”.
The polls are not random, and are asked of the same skewed audience each time
http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/top-stories/panelbase-bans-new-members-from-independence-polls-1-3080830
I’d suggest that the relatively static 35-38% Yes figure returned in most polls is far more accurate, but the electorate in Scotland should be made aware of facts and facts only, negative or not
Bill
Thursday, 6 March 2014
It’s all about The Rangers
Sometimes I think that its Rangers who are keeping the fires burning of the Scottish media.
Of course, they are also joined by Channel 4 stooge Alex Thomson, who seems to be intent on sacrificing his own diminishing credibility to keep some bloggers tarred with a sectarian brush happy, and Graham Spiers, who has done a complete u turn against the Offensive Behaviour at football Act, despite being one of the main driving forces for it happening, and indeed advocating that thought crime should be punished.
In theory, I’d like us Rangers fans to be in a position to ignore these two cretins, and focus on the very pressing matters with the Rangers board, Dave King, and various supporters groups keen to gain a shareholding backed voice within the club but I have to say it gave me great pleasure to see Thomson ridiculed on Twitter on his latest claims that Rangers were set to announce Administration yesterday.
Spiers has largely escaped the wrath of the support and can count himself lucky that Thomson won clown of the day and deflected attention away from the disgusting move by Celtic to rescind the Act, now that the Act has shone a light on the dark republican underbelly of the Celtic support.
After decades of campaigning against “bigotry” and “sectarianism” it seems that the campaigners didn’t sit on some moral high ground at all, but were instead only seeking a licence for Celtic fans to do as they wish, while Rangers fans get jailed for challenging Irish Republicanism and support for racist terrorist groups.
Elsewhere the club’s financial woes keep the Daily Record in business as Dave King prepares to fly to the UK amidst some smoke and mirrors from the Rangers boardroom in a propaganda battle for the hearts and minds of the Rangers support.
While I noticed a poll on Vanguard Bears that only 3% of their members polled supported the current board, the relatively high percentage willing to give Graham Wallace a chance was something I agreed with, probably until this morning, when it became apparent that Sandy Easdale had misled supporters on Sky Sports News by claiming that Dave King had not offered to invest in the club.
Graham Wallace is a very credible board figure, who has a very impressive CV of the kind of level a Rangers CEO should have, but he must feel that he is surrounded by sharks and piranhas in murky boardroom waters, and he will need to assert his authority in that boardroom before his very impressive CV becomes tarnished.
I suspect that Wallace will need to bring forward his 120 Day review if he has any chance of maintaining the levels of confidence that many have in him,
Let me be clear, I have no agenda for any of the competing fan groups, or even for King, but for the club to be stabilised by someone capable of doing so, and structured in such a fashion that trust is earned and maintained in those running the club, and that we have a believable plan to return to the top of the Premier league within 3 years.
Will that happen under Wallace? Will it happen under King?
Frankly, until either of them tell us in detail how they will get there I can’t judge.
All I do know is that there needs to be a relatively quick resolution to this battle in order for the fans to believe the club are on the right track – whether it be through one side gaining control, or through some happy medium where both “sides” join forces for the good of the club.
Time will tell.
Bill
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