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Opinion Penrith

soc123_au

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
19,871
We are empathetic, those of us who are Penrith Panther fans and have been marginalised. We can’t wrap our heads around being deliberately cruel for sport, pretty much. Finals over the last little period are really tough and I get off of FB during the finals season as to not add insult to injury by looking at all of the happy (supposedly happy) families out there. My ostracism started when I first told my mum and dad I was a Penrith Panthers fan as a toddler and witnessed abuse. I was to be silenced at all costs. My mother told everyone about my over active imagination and that I was prone to fibbing. She set me up.. and I have managed to keep going despite her. My advice is to be a shining example of strength. They can’t kill our Penrith Panthers' spirit, although they try. I honestly believe my family would be pleased if I died so they could be comforted and receive casseroles, etc. I plan to live as long as I can now my Penrith Panthers are the best team in the NRL and just to be a constant reminder to all the haters out there, the vile haters who ostracise us, of what it means to be a Penrith Panthers' supporter.
Receiving a few casseroles is pretty special.
 
Messages
14,788
We are empathetic, those of us who are Penrith Panther fans and have been marginalised. We can’t wrap our heads around being deliberately cruel for sport, pretty much. Finals over the last little period are really tough and I get off of FB during the finals season as to not add insult to injury by looking at all of the happy (supposedly happy) families out there. My ostracism started when I first told my mum and dad I was a Penrith Panthers fan as a toddler and witnessed abuse. I was to be silenced at all costs. My mother told everyone about my over active imagination and that I was prone to fibbing. She set me up.. and I have managed to keep going despite her. My advice is to be a shining example of strength. They can’t kill our Penrith Panthers' spirit, although they try. I honestly believe my family would be pleased if I died so they could be comforted and receive casseroles, etc. I plan to live as long as I can now my Penrith Panthers are the best team in the NRL and just to be a constant reminder to all the haters out there, the vile haters who ostracise us, of what it means to be a Penrith Panthers' supporter.

ECEAB3F2-1CCD-4FEE-8281-86E48FAE1ACD.jpeg
 

GongPanther

Referee
Messages
28,676
Its funny about the Penrith rise and the distain of the media. Sometimes the public defines its limits by expressing outrage. The running of a story that seems too unsettling, or the airing of an image that seems too graphic, can set off a storm of protest -- twittershiere, bloggers and radio talk-show hosts, "woke" warriors and enraged citizens -- all denouncing the messenger as an unbeliever, even treasonous. outside the religious like fervour that supporting a team can impose - In this swirl of menace and hate, even the most determined supporter can feel cowed.


People like Gus Gould or Matty Johns or Hooper or the NRL360 team or even Waleed Aly see themselves as a gatekeeper of all social discourse on issues but upset that that people don't need gatekeepers any more. As with many in corp media, he wants to be the conduit of discussion, people don't need to stop at gatekeepers these days and can discuss without the need to be herded into a view.

We respond in bad faith because we presume bad faith from everyone else we deem not to be on our side, and democratic debate simply disintegrates. The result is a public discussion that risks becoming overrun with nonsense.


In his reflections on people, teams, like minded groups, politics and language, George Orwell operated on the assumption that people want to know the truth. Often, though, they don't. In the case of Rugby League ,the many instruments George Orwell felt would be needed to keep people passive and uninformed -- the nonstop propaganda messages, the memory holes, the rewriting of history, Room 101 -- have proved unnecessary. The public has become its own collective Ministry of Truth -- a reality that, in many ways, is even more chilling than the one Orwell envisioned.
George Orwell stuff:
http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks03/0300011h.html
 
Messages
736
Bullying in the workplace can take many forms. Like their schoolyard counterparts, workplace bullies act in a number of ways to target their victims: ostracism, excessive criticism, removal of key duties and responsibilities, engaging co-workers to target the worker in a negative ‘campaign’ against them, denying the worker access to benefits and privileges afforded other workers, as well as not giving the worker credit for any of his or her accomplishment
 

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