Tuesday 8 April 2014

Leigh Griffiths and a Modern Witch Hunt

The videos which have emerged in the past week of Leigh Griffiths joining in a pub sing-along with other Hibernian fans has revealed a self-righteousness among some Celtic fans which is deeply unattractive.

A witch hunt, and I use that term advisedly, has ensued resulting in large numbers of Celtic fans calling for a young working class man to lose his job, over what in the great scheme of things amounts to little more than a minor misdemeanour.

Let's forget for a moment the role of the reprehensible Daily Record in this tawdry affair. The mob are dancing to their tune, but that is to ignore the indisputable fact that Leigh Griffiths has stepped out of line.

As a professional footballer, it probably wasn't the best idea to attend the recent Hearts-Hibs derby match with his old mates and hang out drinking in his old haunts all day.

He should be able to do that, but the reality of the situation is that he was putting himself in a situation where there was the great potential for just such an embarrassing incident to happen.

I think we can all accept that the first chant Griffiths took part in was naughty, but essentially harmless. He was rightly fined by Celtic for his actions which caused embarrassment for the club.

Then, conveniently, a second video emerged, this time showing Griffiths possibly (because it's virtually impossible to tell) chanting the words, "Rudi Skacel is a f****** refugee."

While most Celtic fans had no problem whatsoever with the first chant, this second pushes the hot-button 'racism' issue and as a result a large number of fans have turned on the player.

This is where I have a problem. The song itself is indefensible. It is nasty, distasteful, unpleasant. Leigh Griffiths should not have been singing it, in the same sense that no one really should be singing it.

The reason that the mob has turned on Leigh Griffiths though is not that he sang a nasty, distasteful song about Rudi Skacel. The reason so many have turned on him is that the chant is, apparently, racist.

It has been compared to the 'Famine Song,' which actually is objectively racist - it targets people of a specific ethnic group and invites them to 'go home.'

The 'refugee' chant on the other hand makes no mention of its target (Skacel) being of any particular racial or ethnic group. Neither does it mention his nationality.

A refugee can be anyone who has taken a particular course of action, ie, fleeing persecution in their homeland. To be a refugee is not to have any innate characteristic. Apart from having taken that particular course of action, refugees share no other common characteristics, race, ethnicity or nationality.

As a Catholic, I believe that refugees should always be accepted, nay welcomed, in this country, no questions asked. We have a duty to offer protection and safety to those in need. As I'm often told online by the increasingly leftist, Atheist wing of our support though, I have no right to force my beliefs onto others. Apparently that's their job.

Rudi Skacel is a citizen of the Czech Republic. As an EU citizen, he has the full right to live and work in the UK. He has not fled persecution in his homeland. The chant is patently in error about Skacel's status.

By the same token, no one from the Czech Republic living in the UK is a refugee.

At this point, the mob throw their hands up in exasperation and say, "Of course it's racist, why do you think they're calling Skacel a 'f****** refugee?'"

Well the answer to that is, I don't know and neither does anyone else who has not sung it. We are into the realms of speculation now.

Could it be that thousands of Hibs fans think Skacel actually is a refugee? Possibly they do. Could it be that thousands of Hibs fans hate refugees? Maybe, but it still doesn't necessarily make them racists. Not nice people for sure (if that's the case), but not racist.

I don't discount these possibilities, but here's another one - it is motivated by the age old desire of the football fan to denigrate a rival player in song.

I'm old enough to have stood in the Jungle and belted out a song about Ian Durrant which would provoke similar howls of outrage from the self-righteous if it was repeated today.

I stood on the old Celtic end in January 1988 surrounded by thousands of fellow fans directing monkey chants and worse at Mark Walters, while people closer to the pitch threw bananas at him. I saw someone outside the ground that day dressed in a gorilla suit. Should we all have been banned for life from Celtic Park, banished from the Celtic family forever? Or did we all just need a good kick up the backside and told to wise up?

At the turn of the millennium, the supporters bus I travelled on used to while away the long hours of our trips to Celtic park by singing an offensive song about Michael Mols' wife and her, let's just say, not exactly model looks.

In recent seasons, we've heard songs about Charlie Adams' sister and even this season, the song about one of the de Boer twins' nocturnal (presumably) activities has resurfaced.

All of those chants were/are nasty in their way, but I don't remember many people being up in arms about them (the Walters incident apart).

So what makes Griffiths' refugee chant different is the alleged racist connotations.

Griffiths is guilty of nothing more than joining in with a distasteful chant with other fans of the team he supports.

It is a chant Hibs fans have been doing for several years, yet never once have I read any condemnation of it in the Scottish MSM. Hibernian has never been cited for their fans chanting it by the SFA, and yet suddenly the Daily Record realises it is racist when Leigh Griffiths is caught singing it? Not forgetting that it is far from conclusive that Griffiths actually sings it on the video that has emerged.

If Leigh Griffiths has chanted this song, he has done wrong and should be sanctioned appropriately, but let's keep things in perspective.

The baying for his blood by many Celtic fans at the moment is the result of a dubious charge of racism, leading to an almost Pavlovian response. It is a perfect opportunity for the enlightened chattering classes to attack the unenlightened working class football fan.

Anyone who dares to defend Griffiths against this charge of racism is attacked for being racist themselves. It is becoming a modern witch hunt, with the accused already deemed guilty as charged before the accusation has been examined in the light of a rational investigation.

Do Hibs fans hate refugees? Has their Rudi Skacel chant resulted in mobs of Hibs fans attacking refugees in the Capital? Are Czechs or other central Europeans at increased risk of assault in Edinburgh compared to the rest of the UK?

Or is it just a stupid, mindless, nasty verbal attack on a rival player, the likes of which is chanted by football fans of every team all over the world?

Leigh Griffiths was rightly fined by Celtic for his Sunday sing-a-long to the Hearts going bust chant. I don't know if Celtic were aware of the Skacel chant when this was dealt with, but it happened on the same day. Griffiths has not gone out after that and been caught doing the same thing again.

I'm also suspicious of any suggestion that the videos emerged separately. This has the appearance of a drip-feed of revelations, timed to cause maximum damage.

If Celtic were unaware of the Skacel chant when Griffiths was originally fined, that fine should be increased to the maximum allowed.

What I find unpalatable though is this insistence, this demand, that Griffiths must be sacked. That a young man's career should be ruined simply because of a dubious charge of racism.

That would not be justice, but vindictiveness, forced by a modern Inquisition determined to drive out anyone whose views do not conform to the prevailing liberal consensus.


10 comments:

  1. Good piece. Agree with every word.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bout time we had some rational thought on this. Beware though, as the mob will be onto you soon!

    ReplyDelete
  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  4. A very charitable attitude totally in keeping with Celtic's ethos.
    Let's correct his thinking which is not something that sacking will not enable.

    ReplyDelete
  5. its a witch hunt on this young man and cilling some one a refuge is not racist

    ReplyDelete
  6. If L G had remained seated maybe he wdnt have attracted so much attention!! Stupid twat!!!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I have constantly said the same, why is he been hounded its because they you know who they are THERE ALL HURTING anything about Celtic/Irish/Catholics are spashed all over the Media, yes there dead

    ReplyDelete