Jump to content

Don't Miss a Beat

Join the UK's most passionate festival community. Keep up with the latest conversations, line-up rumours, and music news.

250,000+ Members

Connect with a massive network of fellow festival-goers.

Lively Discussions

Thousands of active topics on music, campsites, and tips.

Hot Rumours & News

Hear about secret sets and lineup drops before anyone else.

Create Free Account
OR
  • Sign Up!

    Join our friendly community of music lovers and be part of the fun 😎

Protests about U2 Playing


Guest HurrahBrother

Recommended Posts

Well, obviously there's no one size fits all solution - but less globalisation rather than more might help. What's been happening in recent years in Latin America (Bolivia, Brazil, Venezuela (at least, until Chavez went off the rails) might point the way forward - if the IMF/World Bank and the various other vested Western interests don't coup, boycott or sanction those governments out of existence. But anything that goes against the current global metapolicy (i.e. free market fundamentalism) immediately ruffles feathers and the G8 start to circle the wagons.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 268
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

God forbid you have money but still have a social conscience.. Best to sit in silence and keep your head down like the w*nkers in the city who are still sitting laughing all the way to the bank. Bonos tax avoidance isnt the reason for Irelands problems. Performers and the uber rich have done exactly the same for decades and its barely raised an eyebrow. The loopholes and laws are made by the tossers we vote into power so at the end of the day we are responsible for allowing it to happen.

Give me a man like Bono anyday over the likes of Cameron and Hague or Blair.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's interesting (from a detached POV) when someone does make noise about going off on a different route and, as you say, ruffles a few feathers.

It's like people forget that for someone to be the leader (like USA have been, and China are becoming), someone has to get shafted first, like Britain was after WW2 by the Americans to ensure the dollar crushed the pound. So the cosy view of "this is how it should work" isn't so cosy, because for everyone to get something out of it, some people have to get a lot more than others, otherwise it wouldn't work.

I'm all for everyone doing their own thing, it's just those vested Western interests won't allow it, but it's going to be interesting 100 years from now when the whole thing has shifted considerably.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread has brought out quite a perspective on how people view the glastonbury experience.

Really, as long as no ones going out there way to disrupt an experience, whats the problem should a group try to highlight the issue of tax evasion? and i notice its not a direct protest against u2 being there, its more highlight tax evasion in general.. granted using u2 to do this, but why not being a high profile act?

Glastonbury is about politics, for many people. there will be people using this weekend to discuss politics, meet up, highlight causes etc all weekend. even attending a rave is bloody political.

each to their own, agree or disagree is not the question. it shouldnt be frowned upon or looked at with contempt should some people decide to do this,

so down with comments like people who do this should "get a job" (stereotypical shit), i spend my £500 and i want protest left behind ill do it elsewhere etc... get a grip. its not going to disrupt your weekend.. and glastonbury is built on people raising awareness.. the rights or wrongs of dont matter to me, i dont agree with every cause thats highlighted the entire weekend. as long as its not disruptive of the set i see no issue with any protest. Get off your clouds, its about diversity, right to highlight issues that people see fit.. and i will be walking past plenty of political protest all weekend that i wont agree with, but it wont disrupt my festival.

rave on.

:O)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread has brought out quite a perspective on how people view the glastonbury experience.

Really, as long as no ones going out there way to disrupt an experience, whats the problem should a group try to highlight the issue of tax evasion? and i notice its not a direct protest against u2 being there, its more highlight tax evasion in general.. granted using u2 to do this, but why not being a high profile act?

Glastonbury is about politics, for many people. there will be people using this weekend to discuss politics, meet up, highlight causes etc all weekend. even attending a rave is bloody political.

each to their own, agree or disagree is not the question. it shouldnt be frowned upon or looked at with contempt should some people decide to do this,

so down with comments like people who do this should "get a job" (stereotypical shit), i spend my £500 and i want protest left behind ill do it elsewhere etc... get a grip. its not going to disrupt your weekend.. and glastonbury is built on people raising awareness.. the rights or wrongs of dont matter to me, i dont agree with every cause thats highlighted the entire weekend. as long as its not disruptive of the set i see no issue with any protest. Get off your clouds, its about diversity, right to highlight issues that people see fit.. and i will be walking past plenty of political protest all weekend that i wont agree with, but it wont disrupt my festival.

rave on.

:O)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Isn't Adele getting unanimously slated for tax avoidance in another thread?

I Don't see why it suddenly becomes justifiable when it's the (far richer) U2 who are doing it.

I'm not too clued up with regards to the finer details of this tax issue though, I must say.

This forum does make me laugh when a serious subject comes up though, reminds me of the townspeople in South Park...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9fEjJ4Ecy9Q

Be nice :P ! None of us are gunna make it out alive anyway people!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Didn't read the whole thread. Too many ridiculous opinions on both sides.

My view though is only a f**king moron wouldn't try to pay as little tax as possible. If you're not breaking the law you're doing absolutely nothing wrong. You pay the tax you're legally required to pay, any more than that is silly.

Fact is, it's the system that's the problem, there are many tax loopholes which perhaps should be closed, but that's a different story. If the loopholes are there, and you are able to use them, of *course* you'd take them! Only an idiot wouldn't.

Oh, and any protest isn't going to spoil anyone's enjoyment of anything. Get real.

Especially not me, the Pyramid Stage would be one of the last places in the world I'd want to be during U2's set.

Edited by Simon1803201
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Blah blah blah, too be honest didn't read the thread, Just want to have lot's fun in a field with other like minded people... :)

Life has to many problems to be dealing with has it is... once inside the fence forget the world even though it's for little while! just enjoy! :)

Edited by jamiejc
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pretty depressed by all the comments by people saying they think this protest is inappropriate because they want to forget the outside world while they're at Glastonbury.

Not just because this issue is important, but because it presumably means that at every single previous festival these people have failed to notice the huge campaigns by the likes of WaterAid, Oxfam, Shelter, MSF et al.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Additionally, Bono wrote the foreword to Jeffrey Sach's The End of Poverty - a book advocating the usual Hayekian neoliberal shock-therapy: liberalisation, privatisation, tax cuts, the usual.

I won't try and dissuade you with links as you seem not value them, but just because an opinion is 'mainstream' doesn't make it indisputable. Maybe you just swallowed the message you were supposed to.

Instead, have a picture:

bono460.jpg

Edited by danbailey80
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the day that wateraid think that the way to get their message across is to dump raw sewage on the crowd at a headliner (for example) people will start looking at them in a different way.

Glastonbury is political and protest is part of it's history (ask vincent bethell), but I think people are saying that it is about the manner of this protest, since the consideration is that what is intended as an attack on U2 is something that could reduce the enjoyment and therefore be a punishment of the crowd, who are not the people the protest is targeted at.

Everyone on both sides really has focussed on bono's personal tax and charity work, however we have all (myself included) ignored the fact that the protest is about the band, who are a business entity and managed by someone who is notoriously tight and shrewd with money. Aint none of us an expert, I'm sure, but we are entitled to our often only lightly informed opinions as much as others are entitled to disagree with them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Didn't read the whole thread. Too many ridiculous opinions on both sides.

My view though is only a f**king moron wouldn't try to pay as little tax as possible. If you're not breaking the law you're doing absolutely nothing wrong. You pay the tax you're legally required to pay, any more than that is silly.

Fact is, it's the system that's the problem, there are many tax loopholes which perhaps should be closed, but that's a different story. If the loopholes are there, and you are able to use them, of *course* you'd take them! Only an idiot wouldn't.

Oh, and any protest isn't going to spoil anyone's enjoyment of anything. Get real.

Especially not me, the Pyramid Stage would be one of the last places in the world I'd want to be during U2's set.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yep, a lot of the opinions in this thread are just what I'd expect from the majority of glastonbury goers these days.

Quoting from page1: "i really dont give a fuk ,if i was ever brilliant at anything and could avoid paying tax i fukin would and so would 99% of people"

That should be put on a tshirt and handed out at the gates along with your wristbands.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the picture, I've changed my mind now. I can't believe how ignorant I've been, swallowing the lies. If only I'd read as much as you. I'll now be down the front with a flag. There's also a picture of him with Bush having a chat and even a handshake - how dare he the evil bastard? Well he dares because that particular chat convinced Bush to give $5 billion. Which is a bit more than using a forum as a vehicle to patronise people.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

  • Latest Activity

    • I think my party got pretty lucky last night, at least compared to some of the horror stories over on Reddit. I was very impressed with Father John Misty in particular.   Perhaps my view would be different if I were a big Massive Attack fan or whatever, but right now my feeling is that if it's not safe for the shows to go ahead... then it's not safe for the shows to go ahead. I'd much rather they were cautious than roll the dice when it comes to something like that.    Here's hoping everyone has a better day today. 
    • It was awful during Father John Misty and I was close to the front. People just shouting and laughing their f-ing heads off about nothing in particular and being louder than the bloody stage.
    • Other things I noted yesterday, away from the obvious…   Positives: - an extra water point towards the back left of the main stages has appeared, which I believe is new for this year (and was much needed) - handing out free ponchos was a good touch  - caroline were fantastic. I’d never been in the Auditori Rockdelux before, it’s a wonderful venue and a great venue if you fancy a more chilled out environment  Negatives: - the talkers. I know it’s always bad here (and most festivals nowadays) but f**k me people wouldn’t shut up yesterday. I wonder if it was partly as a result of people being at artists they had little interest in (due to rain limiting their options), although it wasn’t great during blood orange. We’ll be making an effort to get a spot nearer the front for anyone we particularly care about over the weekend  - not enough staff around (and the ones that are there are largely useless). Most other festivals have them everywhere and are happy to help 
    • Alkaline Trio 90 Barrington Levy 95 Basement Jaxx 120 Billy Bragg 100 Billy Ocean 100 The Black Keys 90 Carl Cox 100 Chase & Status 115 Chelsea Wolfe 85  CMAT 105 Confidence Man 150 MAX Dave 25 David Byrne 145 Disclosure 65  Everything Everything 105 Faithless 80  Fatboy Slim 100 Four Tet 125 (+5) Funeral for a Friend 45 (-5) Garbage 100 GOAT 105  Greentea Peng 120 Happy Mondays 80 Hollie Cook 90 Jorja Smith 100 José González 100 Joy Crookes 120  Judas Priest 90 Kasabian 80  Kneecap 110  The Last Dinner Party 25 Levellers 85  Limp Bizkit 35  Linkin Park 90 Lorde 120 Madness 75  The Maccabees 100 Neck Deep 135  Nile Rodgers & Chic 100 Overmono 100 Pixies 65 The Prodigy 130  Pulp 150 MAX RAYE 100 Ren 85 Richard Ashcroft 95  Say She She 85 Scissor Sisters 120 Self Esteem 120 Skunk Anansie 100 Stereolab 120  The Streets 110 Super Furry Animals 110 Tems 50  Thundercat 90 Tom Jones 70  Two Door Cinema Club 20 Tyler, the Creator 75 Underworld 115 Wet Leg 90  Wilco 95  The Wombats 90 Wolf Alice 135
    • Alkaline Trio 90 Barrington Levy 95 Basement Jaxx 120 Billy Bragg 100 Billy Ocean 100 The Black Keys 90 Carl Cox 100 Chase & Status 115 Chelsea Wolfe 85  CMAT 105 Confidence Man 150 MAX Dave 25  David Byrne 145 Disclosure 65  Everything Everything 105 Faithless 80  Fatboy Slim 100 Four Tet 120  Funeral for a Friend 50 Garbage 100 GOAT 105  Greentea Peng 120 Happy Mondays 80 Hollie Cook 90 Jorja Smith 100 José González 100 Joy Crookes 120  Judas Priest 90 Kasabian 80  Kneecap 110  The Last Dinner Party 25 (-10) Levellers 85  Limp Bizkit 35  Linkin Park 90 Lorde 120 Madness 75  The Maccabees 100 Neck Deep 135  Nile Rodgers & Chic 100 Overmono 100 Pixies 65 The Prodigy 130  Pulp 150 MAX RAYE 100 Ren 85 Richard Ashcroft 95  Say She She 85 Scissor Sisters 120 Self Esteem 120 Skunk Anansie 100 Stereolab 120  The Streets 110 Super Furry Animals 110 Tems 50  Thundercat 90 Tom Jones 70  Two Door Cinema Club 20 Tyler, the Creator 75 Underworld 115 Wet Leg 90  Wilco 95  The Wombats 90 Wolf Alice 135
  • Featured Products

  • Hot Topics

  • Latest Tourdates

×
×
  • Create New...