Cheese rolling, Coopers Hill 2018 |
Thank goodness the Atherstone Ball game is one of those that didn't make it. An annual event played every shrove Tuesday in the pretty midlands town of Atherstone, it all started in 1199 and doesn't appear to have changed much since then. The rules are simple, basically whoever is in possession of the ball at the end of the game (05:00 pm) is the winner, oh yes and competitors are not allowed to kill each other! Since we are now in Lent we have just had the 823rd playing of the game, such an historic event of course gets widely reported, here we have two reports on the match, first from the BBC Atherstone Shrove Tuesday ball game marks 823rd event - BBC News and here from the Metro https://api.metro.co.uk/video/brutal-end-atherstone-ball-game-2023-lads-hurt-annual-tradition-2882959/ Both reporting on the same event, but clearly from different perspectives.
There have been a few times when I have attended an event or sports game, and when I later read reports wondered if the reporter had actually been to the same event. On one occasion I read a review of a concert I had played in and it criticked a piece we didn't even play!
I suppose the point of all this is that your view of something all depends on how you approach it, a quaint and charming tradition, or licensed thuggery ~ and of course it is the same in politics. Today Kier Stammer the leader of the UK Labour party announced his five core missions for government if elected, from my perspective they are a bit bland centerish Tory Light, to my brother they will be far left dangerous socialism ~ we approach from different points of view.
It has always been the case that people will approach events or situations from different stand points after all we all have different formative experiences and different attitudes, but it does seem to me that over the last few years views have become polarised and entrenched. I would like to see a bit more nuance, a bit more openness to alternative views, a bit more compassion, and perhaps acceptance of the simple idea that sometimes "I don't know" is a perfectly good and rational answer.
A little bit of Finn Russell magic goes a long way |
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