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PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 6:47 pm
by jono
its available to view now on on sky anytime interactive fuction

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 6:49 pm
by burjennio
how do you use that? is it sky+ or normal digital?

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 6:51 pm
by jono
i have sky+ hd and i presume it will be on sky+ standard as well, just press yer tv guide mate

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 6:54 pm
by burjennio
ok, il wait til me mam finishes watchin murder she wrote :)

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:01 pm
by burjennio
cheers jono mate but its only on sky+ and HD (which ive been waiting on ofr a month) il watch it at 8

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:04 pm
by KennyisGod....still
I been watchin LFCTV all day, harrowin absolutely harrowin. Tryin to explain to my daughter all the significant things an I'm kinda choked an findin words dont wanna come out.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:06 pm
by burjennio
i know Kenny, reading some of the stories in the Observer article alone is heart breaking

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:11 pm
by jono
the poem's got me, powerfull stuff

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:14 pm
by ShadyLady
jono wrote:the poem's got me, powerfull stuff

Yea, It's True.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:16 pm
by KennyisGod....still
I may have got this wrong, and I'v kinda ummed and arred bout postin it, but was it not said durin the memorial today that the sheffield chief constable (all small letters, no caps) has finally admitted its his fault? If I'm wrong, i dont wanna offend anybody and the mods can take this post out, but I'm almost certain it was said durin the memorial.

Sorry if I'm wrong, i really am, but it seems to have gone un-noticed and not remarked on.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:27 pm
by J*o*n*D*o*e
what a wonderful service that was today and so moving, got to give a mention to our Lord Mayor Steve Rotheram for what he said in his speech, this guy is one of us and told it as it is.

the fight will never stop untill we see Justice for the families of the 96 and all those injured.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:32 pm
by supersub
KennyisGod....still wrote:I may have got this wrong, and I'v kinda ummed and arred bout postin it, but was it not said durin the memorial today that the sheffield chief constable (all small letters, no caps) has finally admitted its his fault? If I'm wrong, i dont wanna offend anybody and the mods can take this post out, but I'm almost certain it was said durin the memorial.

Sorry if I'm wrong, i really am, but it seems to have gone un-noticed and not remarked on.

It is the new chief constable of South Yorkshire that has admitted that they have to take the share of the blame which was put to them in the Taylor Interim Report back in 1989.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:40 pm
by Number 9
The people of Liverpool should be proud of their Mayor!
I thought his speech was bang on and excellent,straight from the heart!
A bit of a contrast from the church men talking about forgivness when he said they would never forgive McKenzie and Scum newspapers for what they said!Fair play to him for being honest.
It would have been so much easier to just speak words of diplomacy and go through the motions.
He chose to speak his mind and the thoughts of thousands of others!
Well done whatever his name is!! :bowdown

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 7:44 pm
by KennyisGod....still
supersub wrote:
KennyisGod....still wrote:I may have got this wrong, and I'v kinda ummed and arred bout postin it, but was it not said durin the memorial today that the sheffield chief constable (all small letters, no caps) has finally admitted its his fault? If I'm wrong, i dont wanna offend anybody and the mods can take this post out, but I'm almost certain it was said durin the memorial.

Sorry if I'm wrong, i really am, but it seems to have gone un-noticed and not remarked on.

It is the new chief constable of South Yorkshire that has admitted that they have to take the share of the blame which was put to them in the Taylor Interim Report back in 1989.

thanx. much appreciated.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 10:19 pm
by Kharhaz
Nearly 100 people lost their lives on Saturday - because they didn't count.

They didn't count because they were football fans and in the eyes of authority, and indeed the general public, that placed them beneath contempt.

As I watched young policemen frantically trying to pump life back into corpses on ripped advertising hoardings, the shattering numbness of that night in Brussels returned.

There was a difference. In Belgium we were riddled with guilt and shame. At Sheffield it was just deep, deep pain.

But as men slumped heavily into their seats around me and threw their heads into their hands, the same angry word was being spat out through the tears: WHY?

The answer is: Because you don't count. Because society has allowed itself to view the football fan as a moronic caricature. And the people who make decisions are happy to play along with this image because it makes their jobs easier.

Take the police on Saturday. Because of them, for the second year running, 28,000 tickets were allocated to Nottingham Forest, whose average attendance is 20,000 while 24,000 tickets were given to Liverpool whose average gate is 39,000.

There were ticket problems last year and they were forseeable this time. The fans complained and Liverpool FC complained to the FA and to the police. Nothing changed. The decision stood. For "safety reasons."

It depends on your definition of safety. Mine does not include cramming one end of a ground while leaving enough space to play five-a-side on the opposite terracing.

On Saturday afternoon as I looked down at the heart-breaking sight of bodies piled up on the pitch below me, to my left there were clear gaps in the huge bank which had been set aside for the Nottingham Forest fans.

The families of the dead will not agree with the police idea of safety, especially as many policemen were assigned elsewhere. Ensuring safety.

As the Liverpool fans drove off the M1 they were greeted by 20 to 30 police who pulled them off the road and searched their cars, vans and coaches for drink. For safety reasons. On the main road into the city all pubs were shut. For safety reasons.

Your civil liberties go out of the window if you happen to have football in your blood.

Outside the ground this year police say they saw large queues forming, so they opened the gate. For safety reasons.

Inside the ground when people turned blue as the life was crushed out of them they pleaded with the police to let them out. But they were kept in their cages. For safety reasons.

When people needed medical help as they lay on the pitch drifting near to death, the response of the police was to form a line round the terraces and across the pitch, and to bring on the Alsations. For safety reasons.

The Alsations got into the ground but the ambulances didn't. Dozens more police were drafted in but the doctors and nurses weren't.

There was no shortage of boys in blue in the stadium but there was a critical shortage of oxygen machines.

But then this was only a football match. You wouldn't expect the authorities to have any contingency plans for dealing with people being crushed to death in a 50,000 crowd.

No. Just keep the animals in check in their cages. That's all you've got to worry about. That way there'll be no trouble and everyone will be safe. And if there is trouble, well, they'll probably deserve it. They're only football fans. They're only hooligans.

I'm not critical of the average policeman who was on duty on Saturday. I saw many trying to save life and comfort the bereaved.

But I'm criticising their bosses. I'm criticising the people on very big salaries who sit around tables making decisions.

I'm criticising a society, led by a government, which has lost touch with what a real football fan is. You know football. The national sport. Watched by millions of normal people every year - 99 per cent of whom are as violent as the average crowd at The Odeon.

Authority hasn't listened to football fans. It hasn't wanted to. It hasn't had to. Because society has been happy to live with the myth that every football fan is a potential criminal.

Well nearly 100 people have just paid the price for this woeful misconception.

This article was first published in the Daily Post on April 17, 1989 - two days after the Hillsborough tragedy.

Brian Reade is a columnist for the Daily Mirror and author of '43 Years With The Same Bird'.


Taken from the Official LFC site.

This made me angry, the fact that just a couple of days later the press had a general idea of what went on and who was at fault and still the rag went with the BS they did just to sell papers. Hopefully, with all the coverage of this anniversary, someone somewhere will again look into this tragedy and justice will be served. Heres hoping.

Rest in peace to all the 96. You'll Never Walk Alone.