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Cunts

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If you like that kinda farmer rock

They became farmer rock in 80’s - their early stuff up until Back in Black has some cracking tracks.

I blame Brian Johnson… the Geordie prick.

This should be a thread in that “Bringing Out the Dead” idea in RG’s film & music forum - Back in Black is an album everyone should own and Highway to Hell is worth buying for the title track on its own.

Dirty Deeds, Let There Be Rock, along Way to the Top are all banging tracks.
 
They became farmer rock in 80’s - their early stuff up until Back in Black has some cracking tracks.

I blame Brian Johnson… the Geordie prick.

This should be a thread in that “Bringing Out the Dead” idea in RG’s film & music forum - Back in Black is an album everyone should own and Highway to Hell is worth buying for the title track on its own.

Dirty Deeds, Let There Be Rock, along Way to the Top are all banging tracks.
Did go to the razors edge tour in the early 90s and got a load of that money with Angus Young on it that dropped for the money talks song. Only went because was given a free ticket and to put a tick on bands seen. Have to say, was a good show even though I Was more into the heavier stuff of sepultura, slayer. Pantera and the like
 
Did go to the razors edge tour in the early 90s and got a load of that money with Angus Young on it that dropped for the money talks song. Only went because was given a free ticket and to put a tick on bands seen. Have to say, was a good show even though I Was more into the heavier stuff of sepultura, slayer. Pantera and the like
I once went to see Genesis (in the 80s) ... that was awful
 
Haha I'd love to gone to one of their concerts. The Top 3 I can remember off the top of my head were : The Skids (at the Cavern), Thin Lizzy (at the Empire) and Boston (somewhere in Stoke).
Would love to have seen lizzy, did seen them support gnr a few years back in Dublin but that was with Ricky Warwick doing vocals sso while they were good it doesn't really count
 
Would love to have seen lizzy, did seen them support gnr a few years back in Dublin but that was with Ricky Warwick doing vocals sso while they were good it doesn't really count
Awesome at The Empire - I was right down near the front and Phil killed it.
 
No one can accuse the French of living in the past, preparing for CL final supported by 30yr old false data.
 
Yep. I'm not waiting for an apology, because there won't be one. I've despised football administrators as a breed ever since Hillsborough and this lot are no exception.
 
Yep. I'm not waiting for an apology, because there won't be one. I've despised football administrators as a breed ever since Hillsborough and this lot are no exception.
And not just administrators but politicians. I hate them all whatever their party, whatever their position. Only out to feather their own nests and protect their positions at all costs.
 
There is no justice, no matter who gets sacked or resigns.
I drive a small comfort from the fact that the powers that be decided I was not to blame for the death of 97 comrades, some 30 years later.
But it doesn't matter if their lies last 30 years, 30 minutes or 30 seconds, the fact is the cunts will always try to deflect their failure into our blame.
No amount of public apology, resignation or legal inquiry will ever fix that.
That was one of the reasons i didn't submit my evidence to the website.. And, while I respect and admire what people like Dan Austin are doing, i can't help feeling it is a futile gesture against these total and utter CUNTS.
 
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Totally understandable view. Each person affected has to deal with this in their own way and whatever works for you is what you should do. My take on it (admittedly as someone who wasn't there) would be that the truth is worth telling for its own sake, whether or not it has a concrete effect on the barstewards behind all this.
 



Jurgen Klopp has revealed how his family were caught up in the mayhem at the Champions League final in Paris as he insisted: “We must ensure this never happens again.”

The Liverpool boss has also questioned the wisdom of UEFA holding the showpiece event at the Stade de France after it was moved from St Petersburg following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

UEFA has launched an independent review into the shocking scenes in the French capital which saw supporters penned into dangerously tight spaces, teargassed by police and attacked by local gangs, who had scaled fences to force their way into the stadium without tickets.

It was only the day after Liverpool’s defeat by Real Madrid that Klopp became fully aware of what fans had been forced to endure.

“There are different things to talk about. Some of them I think it makes no sense to talk about because there is an ongoing investigation,” says Klopp.

“The situation outside? I heard about it first-hand from my family because they were in the middle of everything. They texted me before the game, ‘We are in, good luck’ stuff like this, but they were pretty much one and a half hours away from being in the stadium.

“What happened to them happened to everyone, pretty much. Two or three people I spoke to were lucky, they got in and were waiting. Then there were all the issues throughout the game. There were a lot of spots occupied definitely by people without tickets but they were not Liverpool supporters.

“This is pretty much the story everyone told — everyone had this experience. I think I knew 50 people inside the stadium, 47 people told me exactly the same story. That is obviously not how it should be.

“In the end, it felt for them — and they are passionate Liverpudlians — that the smallest problem we had that night was that we lost the game. Imagine that around the Champions League final. Crazy.

“We all know how beautiful Paris is and the big events they have got coming up in the next few years. But these kinds of things need to be sorted and clarified. I think we were really lucky that more did not happen. We have to make sure it does not happen again.”

French interior minster Gerald Darmanin initially blamed the problems on Liverpool fans turning up late and claimed thousands were in possession of fake tickets.

He has since backtracked with the French Senate launching their own investigation into what went wrong.

The final in Paris was a desperate end to what had been a memorable season for the club with Klopp’s men winning both domestic cups and losing out to Manchester City in the Premier League title race by a solitary point.

“For me, it’s not the last memory of the season to be honest. Mine is the bus tour, which was outstanding. But I was not outside the stadium, trying to get in,” he adds.

“It’s why everyone, the authorities, have to make sure this does not happen again. It was clear where it was (held) was a problem.

“I think in Paris, the authorities would have known about the regional issues there. Anyway, UEFA decided pretty quick that it would be in Paris. There were other cities, obviously, where it could have been held. I understand that they got the information pretty late.

“So how to organise it? You need somewhere it is easy to organise — and UEFA and Paris, this is not the first time they have worked together, all these kind of things. I’m 100 per cent sure that nobody made a mistake intentionally. It’s not that everyone thought: ‘Ah, pfft, who cares how supporters get in!’ But the mistakes still happened and now we have to sort it.”
 
If this is accurate, fair dos to the French. Aside from a few individuals (and it'll be interesting to see what if anything happens to those individuals now) they've seen what happened and called it out.
 
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