| Town have won something this season, yay - nice one Mark! 23:35 - Mar 24 with 494 views | unstableblue | We are the first football club to ever hold a Reform Party rally/meeting according to AI: “Final conclusion ✅ Reform UK has held many rallies across the UK ❌ None verifiably at football stadiums or club grounds ⚠️ The Ipswich Town case is unusual as the Reform Party are deemed controversial, and football clubs do not typically host such events as they wish to remain politically neutral” Own goal, much? Farage joked on the official Reform social feeds earlier (which now have him at Portman Road holding up an Ipswich number 10 shirt as their banner) that his next rally in Leeds will be at Elland Road - you jester Nigel! You rogue you. Of course it’s not at Elland Road… because no English football club would be so utterly stupid to allow it. And indeed researching with AI further the picture gets worse - yes Mark Ashton you donut even flawed AI LLMs can read the bloody room. These are like Burgess’ own goals at Swansea turned up to 11. You’ve got to laugh: “Conclusion UK political parties almost never use football stadiums or club grounds for major rallies or campaign events. While they may visit clubs or occasionally use internal rooms for small, private functions, football venues are not part of mainstream political campaigning infrastructure. Why they don’t use football grounds: 1) Strong expectation of neutrality Football clubs are deeply embedded in local communities with diverse political views. Hosting a rally risks: - alienating sections of the fanbase - damaging the club’s public image Clubs therefore tend to avoid overt political alignment. 2) Commercial and financial risk Modern clubs are commercial businesses. Allowing a political rally could: - upset sponsors or partners - trigger backlash from supporters - create reputational risk that outweighs any venue income 3) Optics and messaging control A rally is a carefully staged media event. Stadiums introduce: uncontrollable visual elements (club branding, seating layouts) associations with a specific locality or fanbase” |  |
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| STOP THE PRESS on 23:44 - Mar 24 with 427 views | unstableblue | Further detailed AI research reveals: In 2016, Jeremy Corbyn spoke at a political rally inside the stadium of Featherstone Rovers (Post Office Road / “Big Fellas Stadium”) during a leadership contest Apologies, Town haven’t ill judged at all. Oh!! but in true AI fashion it then informs that Featherstone Rovers are a rugby league club!!! Indeed the more you think about this, it is moronic from the Town senior team. If anyone can find a significant political party event or rally (not a meeting held in a conference room without press) at a UK football ground please do reply! MY LAST WORD OF THE NIGHT, and post for a few days. For those questioning the outrage and the anger, for those mocking those wanting to complain, I give you some choice Nigel missives. Night night, and in McKenna we trust: “The best world leader? As an operator, but not as a human being, I would say Putin". “We ourselves in the European Union provoked the conflict through our territorial expansionism in the Ukraine” “The RNLI is a taxi service for illegal people smugglers" “If a woman... has a child and takes two or three years off work, she is worth far less to the employer when she comes back than when she goes away." (On women breastfeeding) “I think that given that some people feel very embarrassed by it... perhaps sit in the corner." "Men are prepared to sacrifice their family lives in order to pursue a career and be successful in a way that fewer women are." "Basic principle was right": Farage said the "basic principle" of Enoch Powell’s 1968 "Rivers of Blood" Challenged in late 2025 over allegations by 20 former classmates that he used extreme racist and antisemitic slurs at school (such as "Hitler was right"), he responded: "Have I said things 50 years ago that you could interpret as being banter in a playground... in the modern light of day? Yes." While stating he was "unhappy" with a Reform UK MP who said seeing "black and Asian people" in TV adverts drove her mad, he defended the sentiment by saying: "adverts [are] now unrepresentative of British society as a whole." Following Trump's return to the White House in early 2025, Farage hailed him as "the bravest man that I know," Farage argued that Trump's re-election was "absolutely vital" because he is "by instinct, a peace-maker" who understands that "peace comes through strength, not through weakness". "I hope and believe that many things that will happen in America will serve as an inspiration to us". Despite over a dozen women accusing Trump of sexual assault, Farage has maintained his loyalty, stating as recently as December 2025: "For 10 years I have stood up and defended President Trump... I have never wavered in my thoughts or my views for one minute" |  |
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| I found one!! Keir Starmer’s a w@nker on 00:19 - Mar 25 with 347 views | unstableblue | Keir Starmer visited Bristol Rovers in 2024 to launch Labour’s manifesto pledge* to form an independent football regulator in the wake of the proposed European Super League breakaway. What a w@nker https://www.gazetteseries.co.u Thank god Nigel’s got some sane and fully funded policy commitments, hello ICE and tax cuts for the wealthy. *note - the legislation was being driven by the local Labour MP to Bristol Rovers hence the choice of club and connection. [Post edited 25 Mar 0:54]
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