Hope he hates the Congo too then absolutely horrific bastards were the Congolese during the slave trade.
Just listening to radio in work canteen........mass psychosis and clearly vaccinated over sensationalism types.....a double egger kind of thing. Did you cry for my fking gran.....did u fk
What happened before the white man got there...........if it was happening before we got there we certainly up the game
was slavery happening before the white man reached Africa? Bruv, I know you're like, infamously off your ****ing head and a bit stupid, but that can't be a serious question.
Along the lines of the Queen did nothing to stop racism and black people shouldn't morn. He was then pulled up with someone retweeting him praising the Queen.
He didn't have an opinion he was revealed quite clearly as a hypocrite who was willing to post anything that got him attention. If he had truly believed in what he was saying then there would be a debate to be had, that wasn't the case.
Premier league meeting as we speak to decide what to do,Govt saying it's not mandatory to postpone games,so who knows
They should play the Premier League games but all teams and referees have to play in a full black kit.
Who said anything about forgetting or not having an opinion? I'm no royalist, far from it, but I can distinguish the difference between holding a political view and showing a moment of humanity on the day a 96 yr old passes away. Too much fcking hate in the world, the irony is racism springs from it. If you're going to spout hate hours after an old dear passes away then you're no different from the racists imo - as is the case with Sinclair.
Coming from Liverpool (possibly) I would have thought you would be a bit more supportive: During the 18th century Liverpool was Britain’s main slaving port. Between 1700 and 1807, ships from Liverpool carried about 1.5 million Africans across the Atlantic in conditions of great cruelty. Most Liverpool ships went to the islands of the Caribbean where captains sold the Africans to plantation owners. Much of Liverpool’s wealth came from slavery. From about 1750 until 1807, between a third and a half of Liverpool’s trade was with Africa and the Caribbean. Virtually all the leading inhabitants of the town, including the Mayors, Town Councillors and MPs, invested in the slave trade and profited from it. The prosperity and growth of the town was closely connected with its involvement with slavery. When the campaign to abolish the trade began in the 1780s, opposition in the town was strong. Several Liverpudlians spoke in favour of the trade at the parliamentary inquiries and the most prominent were given valuable gifts from the Town Council and several were given the freedom of the borough.