Dalglish on Thatcher tributes: Why Hillsborough victims are more deserving of a minute's silence

fifthcolumnblue

Vital Football Legend
Well said.

JFT96

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Kenny Dalglish on Margaret Thatcher tributes: Why Hillsborough victims are more deserving of a minute's silence

Respect should be shown where it is due, NOT demanded, writes Kenny Dalglish

So Graham Kelly, the former chief executive of the FA, thinks there should be a minute’s silence for Margaret Thatcher at football games this weekend.

Really? Well, I’m glad Mr Kelly is still popping up with suggestions because I have got a few for him, too.

The first is that this weekend should be about our football clubs wanting to be respectful to the fans who died at Hillsborough on April 15, 1989.

It would be totally wrong for anybody to attempt to make any other act of remembrance go hand in hand with that.

Everyone who didn’t realise it already now knows, after the events of this year, that those who died are more than worthy of that minute’s silence.

And the response from football supporters everywhere to the emergence of the truth about what happened at Hillsborough - nowhere more than at Everton - has been unbelievable.

So let’s have nobody trying to jump on a bandwagon and using it for something else.

If the FA, in their great wisdom, wanted to plan a tribute to Mrs Thatcher, let them do it another weekend. Not this one.

And maybe while Mr Kelly is talking about ‘appropriate levels of respect’ for the former Prime Minister maybe he should apply that to Hillsborough, too.

Mr Kelly was one of the men in power at the FA at the time of the disaster and it would be nice if, finally, he sat down with some of the families of those who died.

The discussions don’t need to be made public. They could take place in private but it would be courteous if he gave the families answers to a few questions.

Why did you pick a ground that had no up to date safety licence for Liverpool’s FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest?

Why did your organisation ignore warnings about previous problems that had happened at Hillsborough?

The FA was the organisation that approved the venue for the game. Does that not mean they have a certain level of responsibility for it?

I don’t know the answers to these questions but Mr Kelly does. Why doesn’t he have a sensible conversation with the families?

Maybe, he could also tell them why the FA appeared to be focussing on football after Hillsborough rather than the human tragedy that had unfolded.

Football was incidental after Hillsborough. Football didn’t matter. All these years on, I’d like to know if Mr Kelly recognises that now.


http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/kenny-dalglish-margaret-thatcher-tributes-1827821
 
I don't understand why we would be remembering the 96 this weekend. If it was 10 or 20 years since the event then fair enough but 14 years ?

Thatcher died this week. She was our only female Prime Minister. She ran this country for 12 years and was democractically elected 3 times. I've heard a lot from supporters of the 96 attacking her like she was somehow responsible for what happened.

I think you'll find there is a strong political motivitation behind a lot of all of this and it's disgraceful really to the memory of a key figure in our history.

'Ding Dong the witch is dead' is being played by the BBC on top of the pops !
 
Whilst I am not going to get into a potential split here, it seems to me that Mrs T did a lot to curb the violence that was entering the game in respect of spectators and so called football fans.

I also recall that it appears that the cover up/lies were not down to mrs T and cannot be laid at her door nor can the tragic deaths at Hillsborough be her fault.

She stood up for Britain in times of need and deserves respect like any great leader in history.

If the authorities decide either way I shall respect that decision but if they do hold a minutes silence I expect that minute to be respected by those there.
 
Buzz Lightyear - 13/4/2013 22:06

Whilst I am not going to get into a potential split here

A bit ironic, considering what you went on to say. i don't want to cause a split either





she was a ****
 
No need to apologise Buzz.

It was however your need to 'redress the balance' that I took offence to. The premise of the article by Dalglish was that any remembrance for :100: should NOT take place at the same time as the one for the 96, particularly as this years is shortly after the report proving the ineptitude of the authorities (including her government) surrounding the events of that day. Nobody (on this thread) was saying that there shouldn't be a remembrance for :100: (at least not until i arrived :grin: ), just that it shouldn't be at the same time. I'm not sure, what you felt needed to be 'redressed'

Anyway - we're here to talk about fitba & god's own team. Let's move on :trophy:
 
What I was saying was that if they did a minutes silence, for whatever reason, then it should be respected. I was not advocating that there should be one particularly for the lady.

I am against political interference in sport.

 
She was a human being who has living family.

She deserves respect for that reason alone surely ?

Would anyone of us like having the demise of our mother celebrated with a BBC showing of Top of the Pops playing 'Ding Dong The Witch is Dead' ?