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All you've done there Branton is to supply some numbers then make an assertion because of those numbers, you have not explained the bit in the middle.
So now we don't need any evidence? just assumptions
Have you given the data that tells me how you get from the numbers to the conclusions? you know the bit that tells me how and why you can come to those conclusions. Or are you now making assumptions that fit your argument?Show me the surveys the questionnaires all the things that social scientists would use to be able to make those conclusions.
Quote from: SydneyRover on November 24, 2022, 08:59:13 pmHave you given the data that tells me how you get from the numbers to the conclusions? you know the bit that tells me how and why you can come to those conclusions. Or are you now making assumptions that fit your argument?Show me the surveys the questionnaires all the things that social scientists would use to be able to make those conclusions.And that's my cue to exit.
China is the Premier League's biggest market with 300 million viewers watching games weekly. Next is India with 147 million.*2011 figures so probably increased since thenhttps://www.sportingindex.com/spread-betting-blog/premier-league-viewing-figuresThe Indian Super League is the most watched sport in India, bigger than the IPL cricket. Both the Indian and Chinese leagues had a higher average attendence than Seria A the last time figures were collected:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Super_League_attendanceSo if you are trying to think of a reason why British Asians are under-represented in British football it's got noting to do with football not being popular in Asian communities - in Britain or in Asia.
Branton I’d give up you’re on a loser. You could be in complete agreement with some people on here and they’d just make excuses to contradict or argue with you. You should be used to it. Same old same old
Watching Brazil tonight on the beeb and they have Gilberto Silva as one of the pundits.The guy still gives me nightmares.
Quote from: wilts rover on November 24, 2022, 09:22:13 pmChina is the Premier League's biggest market with 300 million viewers watching games weekly. Next is India with 147 million.*2011 figures so probably increased since thenhttps://www.sportingindex.com/spread-betting-blog/premier-league-viewing-figuresThe Indian Super League is the most watched sport in India, bigger than the IPL cricket. Both the Indian and Chinese leagues had a higher average attendence than Seria A the last time figures were collected:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Super_League_attendanceSo if you are trying to think of a reason why British Asians are under-represented in British football it's got noting to do with football not being popular in Asian communities - in Britain or in Asia.Thanks Wilts - that's a sensible and well reasoned counter argumentBut that's watching football not playing it.How do you explain India having 17.7% of the world's population and only the 61st best women's team and the 106th best men's team in the world. Or the fact that British Asians account for 8% of the England and Wales population but less than 1% of our pro footballers. If it's not down to a lack of participation??
Back to the footy....Angleterre today, let's just hope for a good performance, no injuries, Grealish to start for a change?and no hypocritical virtue signalling like the Germans..... remember kids, if the players and pundits had the moral conscience they pretend to have then they wouldn't be there and neither would they pick up their Chinese funded pay packet each month back in the EPLPickin n choosin at the outrage buffetPS.....if the pundits keep banging on about this mythical "red wall" of Wales fans you'd think a football ground had never had fans in before, pretty much every nation has made more noise so far
Quote from: DRFC_AjA on November 25, 2022, 07:22:38 amBack to the footy....Angleterre today, let's just hope for a good performance, no injuries, Grealish to start for a change?and no hypocritical virtue signalling like the Germans..... remember kids, if the players and pundits had the moral conscience they pretend to have then they wouldn't be there and neither would they pick up their Chinese funded pay packet each month back in the EPLPickin n choosin at the outrage buffetPS.....if the pundits keep banging on about this mythical "red wall" of Wales fans you'd think a football ground had never had fans in before, pretty much every nation has made more noise so farThey are doing their jobs aren't they? If everybody boycotted work due to moral objections, then millions of us wouldn't go to work every day, as pretty much every big corporation or institution has some sort of objectionable moral record of some description, whether it be environmental, low pay, poor standards, corruption, involvement in politics, back-handers, tax, or whatever else.You can have ethical concerns and still take part in something but protest instead. That's a perfectly reasonable stance to take. I don't agree with a lot of the politics of this country and find a lot of what's happening here to be morally repugnant at the moment, but I don't refuse to go to work or participate in society.
Back to the footy....Angleterre today, let's just hope for a good performance, no injuries, Grealish to start for a change?and no hypocritical virtue signalling like the Germans..... remember kids, if the players and pundits had the moral conscience they pretend to have then they wouldn't be there and neither would they pick up their Chinese funded pay packet each month back in the EPLPickin n choosin at the outrage buffetPS.....if the pundits keep banging on about this mythical "red wall" of Wales fans you'd think a football ground had never had fans in before, pretty much every nation has made more noise so far
Won’t win it unless they are told to go out and play without fear. Let other teams worry about us not the other way round.That doesn’t mean going gun hoe. Obviously we need to be organised and know the oppositions strengths but the emphasis has to be on using our talented attacking players and going out to score goals.
They are doing their jobs aren't they? If everybody boycotted work due to moral objections, then millions of us wouldn't go to work every day, as pretty much every big corporation or institution has some sort of objectionable moral record of some description, whether it be environmental, low pay, poor standards, corruption, involvement in politics, back-handers, tax, or whatever else.You can have ethical concerns and still take part in something but protest instead. That's a perfectly reasonable stance to take. I don't agree with a lot of the politics of this country and find a lot of what's happening here to be morally repugnant at the moment, but I don't refuse to go to work or participate in society.
Quote from: pib on November 25, 2022, 12:34:35 pmThey are doing their jobs aren't they? If everybody boycotted work due to moral objections, then millions of us wouldn't go to work every day, as pretty much every big corporation or institution has some sort of objectionable moral record of some description, whether it be environmental, low pay, poor standards, corruption, involvement in politics, back-handers, tax, or whatever else.You can have ethical concerns and still take part in something but protest instead. That's a perfectly reasonable stance to take. I don't agree with a lot of the politics of this country and find a lot of what's happening here to be morally repugnant at the moment, but I don't refuse to go to work or participate in society.The objectionable moral record of Qatar involves appalling/racist treatment of foreign workers resulting in 100s of deaths and 1,000s of injuries each year including in building the World Cup stadiums; forced labour inc confiscation of passports; homosexuality is illegal and can be punished by death from stoning; women cannot marry, travel abroad, take contraceptives or as single parents retain custody of their children without permission from their male guardian and face restrictions in what they can wear; you can only vote if you have a descendant who held Qatari citizenship in 1930 - so much of the population is disenfranchised on racial grounds.Considering that list would you go and "just do a job" in Qatar which promotes the country and it's regime on the world stage?!There is really no comparison to the behaviours you list above involving some UK companies - many of which are illegal in this country, or indeed UK politics. In fact I'd humbly suggest you reconsider your appalling analogy.
Quote from: DRFC_AjA on November 25, 2022, 07:22:38 amBack to the footy....Angleterre today, let's just hope for a good performance, no injuries, Grealish to start for a change?and no hypocritical virtue signalling like the Germans..... remember kids, if the players and pundits had the moral conscience they pretend to have then they wouldn't be there and neither would they pick up their Chinese funded pay packet each month back in the EPLPickin n choosin at the outrage buffetPS.....if the pundits keep banging on about this mythical "red wall" of Wales fans you'd think a football ground had never had fans in before, pretty much every nation has made more noise so farThey are doing their jobs aren't they? If everybody boycotted work due to moral objections, then millions of us wouldn't go to work every day, as pretty much every big corporation or institution has some sort of objectionable moral record of some description, whether it be environmental, low pay, poor standards, corruption, involvement in politics, back-handers, tax, or whatever else.You can have ethical concerns and still take part in something but protest instead. That's a perfectly reasonable stance to take. I don't agree with a lot of the politics of this country and find a lot of what's happening here to be morally repugnant at the moment, but I don't refuse to go to work or participate in society.