Dave Whelan

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Lets close this thread please.

I don't see why this thread being open is doing any harm, and the conversation has been on-topic since the beginning. It was always going to be about the pros (or lack thereof) and cons of Thatcher's tenure, and how the average football fan is likely to view her today. It's all relevant.

Also I can't say I've noticed any sexism.
 
Thank goodness the Pope is an Argentinian otherwise all the Thatcher lovers would be seeking a Sainthood for her.

Our manager is also an Argentinian and I am not sure he would want to pay any respects to Maggie in a minutes silence or in any other way.
 
I don't see why this thread being open is doing any harm, and the conversation has been on-topic since the beginning. It was always going to be about the pros (or lack thereof) and cons of Thatcher's tenure, and how the average football fan is likely to view her today. It's all relevant.

Also I can't say I've noticed any sexism.

I'm sorry, but I cannot find any relevance to football in this thread. These sort of debates are so pointless. We all have our opinions. No-one is going to suddenly see the light.

The thread was about the minutes' silence not about the pros and cons of Thatcher. This thread is just enabling one or two strongly opinionated people to sound clever.

And now Godders is bringing in religion and Argentinian nonsense into it.
 
To quote from that piece I posted a link to earlier - "It is the most bovine sort of me-tooism, this idea that football's blazers must institute policies and protocols for dealing with notable deaths, as though they were key players in events vastly bigger than themselves."

That to me is precisely why there shouldn't be a minutes silence for MT or, to be honest, any other non-footballing death.
 
A lot is made of Thatcher`s achievements - I would contend that another encumbent could have done better, and without alienating whole sectors of society, both nationally and internationally. We`ll never know of course.
 
To quote from that piece I posted a link to earlier - "It is the most bovine sort of me-tooism, this idea that football's blazers must institute policies and protocols for dealing with notable deaths, as though they were key players in events vastly bigger than themselves."

That to me is precisely why there shouldn't be a minutes silence for MT or, to be honest, any other non-footballing death.

Or, quite a lot of the actual football-related one's actually. I mean, where do you draw the line?
 
I certainly won't be silent during any "tribute" to her.

I find the older I get, the more left wing I'm getting... which seems a complete polar opposite to many mates and especially my father.
 
OK, there have been some requests to close this thread, and in the interests of debate my opinion has been to leave it open but... please stay on the topic..!

Is it right for there to be a period of silence, for the memory of Mrs Thatcher, prior to the start of football matches held over this weekend, yes or no..?
 
I'm sorry, but I cannot find any relevance to football in this thread. These sort of debates are so pointless. We all have our opinions. No-one is going to suddenly see the light.

The thread was about the minutes' silence not about the pros and cons of Thatcher. This thread is just enabling one or two strongly opinionated people to sound clever.

And now Godders is bringing in religion and Argentinian nonsense into it.

We're football fans. There's a good chance that the opinions on here would reflect the opinions of those in the stadiums up and down the country, therefore it is all relevant. Considering most people who have posted on this thread have had some sort of problem with Thatcher, that probably shows that a minute's silence for her would not be respected.

As for being strongly opinionated, I will never understand how people always make that out to be a bad thing. The opposite is ignorance.
 
OK, there have been some requests to close this thread, and in the interests of debate my opinion has been to leave it open but... please stay on the topic..!

Is it right for there to be a period of silence, for the memory of Mrs Thatcher, prior to the start of football matches held over this weekend, yes or no..?

No! But this has nothing to do with my opinion of Thatcher.
 
As for being strongly opinionated, I will never understand how people always make that out to be a bad thing. The opposite is ignorance.

That is simply not the case. Some of the world's most ignorant people happen to be the most opinionated. Have you actually read your own signature? To hold a strong, unchallengeable view about anything means that you consciously or unconsciously deny other views without giving them proper consideration.
 
That is simply not the case. Some of the world's most ignorant people happen to be the most opinionated. Have you actually read your own signature? To hold a strong, unchallengeable view about anything means that you consciously or unconsciously deny other views without giving them proper consideration.

Maybe we mean different things when we say "strongly opinionated". To me it doesn't mean a refusal to consider contradictory views, it just means an opinion which is strongly grounded in knowledge of relevant facts.
 
Maybe we mean different things when we say "strongly opinionated". To me it doesn't mean a refusal to consider contradictory views, it just means an opinion which is strongly grounded in knowledge of relevant facts.

But herein lies the problem. The facts remain the same and yet two opinions can be diametrically opposed. So any such argument boils down to, "I'm right. because I am."

I have a friend who is a Jehovah's Witness. I say to him, how come you are right when other people hold different opinions. His answer is, "But I KNOW I am". Which, by the way, is why I know I'll never change your opinion even though I know I'm right, and you'll never get me to change my mind even though you know that you are right.
 
Maybe we mean different things when we say "strongly opinionated". To me it doesn't mean a refusal to consider contradictory views, it just means an opinion which is strongly grounded in knowledge of relevant facts.
But herein lies the problem. The facts remain the same and yet two opinions can be diametrically opposed. So any such argument boils down to, "I'm right. because I am." I have a friend who is a Jehovah's Witness. I say to him, how come you are right when other people hold different opinions. His answer is, "But I KNOW I am". Which, by the way, is why I know I'll never change your opinion even though I know I'm right, and you'll never get me to change my mind even though you know that you are right.
I think you two ought to agree to differ [on the topic you've managed to stray off] on this one.

Someone intelligent once said [I forget who] of debate... in order to be understood, first you must understand [the opposing view].

EDIT: I think this one has run it's course. Perhaps a Poll next time for this sort of fringe question.
 
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