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NeoPhono
Übermensch

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: In Orbit
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I really don't see it occuring that often here in the US, but when it does, it's blown out in front of the media to no end.
For example, I got my undgrad and am currently working on a graduate degree from Ohio State. We've become infamous for the rioting that took place after the Michigan game in 2004. As crazy as the OSU/Michigan rivalry is, it's pretty peaceful (for the most part). However, you get a bunch of drunk college kids rioting 12 hours after the game and people claim that it's sports related. Hell no. It's just a bunch of drunk people rioting.
I'm not saying it very well, but my point is that I believe in the US most "hooliganism" is drunk people being idiots, with sports only used as a spark to get things going (or as an excuse later on). It appears that in the UK, "hooliganism" is the mindset of using an intense sports rivalry as the sole reason for causing chaos.
In the US, a fan for team A goes and sees a match against team B. Both fans drink until they're stupid drunk and end up fighting.
In the UK, a fan for team A goes and sees a match against team B so that he can beat the hell out of the fan for team B.
I hope that made sense, and I also want to point out that is how I percieve things.
(Okay, been up since 2:00 PM yesterday, time for sleepy)
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Jun-27-2006 12:10
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NeoPhono
Übermensch

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: In Orbit
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| quote: | Originally posted by George Smiley
So do you think it's a problem? Does it have the potential to become worse/more organised as per Europe? |
As of right now, no. In Europe football/soccer is the sport. Yeah, you have others, but it has pretty much unrivaled popularity. In the US you have the "big" ones, being football, basketball and baseball (hockey to a much smaller degree). You simply don't have entire towns or regions or countries that go insane about one particular sport as you do in Europe.
I was in Rome for the AS Roma/Lazio game a few years back, and it was crazy. People riding around waving flags, honking horns, screaming on the metro, days before the match. It was as if two countries were at war. Then there were the inevitable images of Italian riot police cracking people over the head with rifle butts. That same year while I was in Sicily at a regional match, a fan was killed in the riots surrounding a game.
I just don't see a sport in the US where rivalry is used as a means of justification for physical violence nearly to the degree as in Europe when it comes to football/soccer. We just like to get trashed and beat the hell out of each other, regardless of the occasion.
I guess in the end it's like the anti-video game lobby. To me it's not the video game (or the sport) that causes violence, it's people being dumb asses that causes violence.
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Jun-27-2006 17:44
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Spacey Orange
still loves trance.

Registered: Jul 2004
Location: California
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Jun-28-2006 19:51
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Michael19
Liverpool FC fan
Registered: Jul 2004
Location: Eire
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Ranagers fans got fine over there actions against villareal in spain. Celtic have always had a good name. Ranagers seem to still have that bad name when they travel abroad though.
___________________
Liverpool Champions of Europe 2005!
TA's NFL survival League winner 2006!
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Jul-02-2006 22:02
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HardTranceProd
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Washington DC
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| quote: | Originally posted by Spacey Orange
no, cos american really aren't as passionate about anything. |
Quite right. Also, America is a much "cleaner", more squeamish place than Europe.
Many things which are extremely common in Europe -- such as smoking, drinking, street hooliganism, and prostitution -- are very rare in the States; there is much more respect for the law and a public dislike of the so-called "vices", and people are also more impressionable and naive.
One other thing, slightly off-topic but still related, re: "passionate about anything". I see this difference most clearly in girls. European girls actually have hobbies and interests that they pursue just as enthusiastically as guys, such as music, DJs, etc. American girls for the most part only have one interest: finding Mr. Right. There are exceptions but most American girls do not have the type of interesting hobbies or passions (I'm not talking about shopping) that other girls do. I may actually create a separate topic on this.
___________________
"The favorite American pastime is not baseball, it's moral crusades."
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Jul-02-2006 22:22
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shaolin_Z
Hei Hu Quan

Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Austin, Texas, USA: TXTA #102
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| quote: | Originally posted by HardTranceProd
Quite right. Also, America is a much "cleaner", more squeamish place than Europe.
Many things which are extremely common in Europe -- such as smoking, drinking, street hooliganism, and prostitution -- are very rare in the States; there is much more respect for the law and a public dislike of the so-called "vices", and people are also more impressionable and naive.
One other thing, slightly off-topic but still related, re: "passionate about anything". I see this difference most clearly in girls. European girls actually have hobbies and interests that they pursue just as enthusiastically as guys, such as music, DJs, etc. American girls for the most part only have one interest: finding Mr. Right. There are exceptions but most American girls do not have the type of interesting hobbies or passions (I'm not talking about shopping) that other girls do. I may actually create a separate topic on this. |
You seem to be awefully dissatisfied with American culture/life here and a little "homesick." Did you grow up/live in Europe? How long have you been in the US?
___________________
"The Greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge." -Stephen Hawking
"First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me— and there was no one left to speak out for me." -Martin Niemöller
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Jul-03-2006 16:58
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