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So an image of a ship now automatically means slavery?

This article sounds like the guardian clutching at straws and trying to create a reaction.
They have gone through a period of self flagellation themselves in terms of benefiting from slavery and have pulled the rest of Manchester including the reds and us into their analysis. Whilst I didn’t agree with much of their conclusions, I didn’t see the article as a hatchet job.
 
They have gone through a period of self flagellation themselves in terms of benefiting from slavery and have pulled the rest of Manchester including the reds and us into their analysis. Whilst I didn’t agree with much of their conclusions, I didn’t see the article as a hatchet job.

You wake up one morning and decide that a cartoon ship was once a slave ship and that we should in some way be ashamed of that?

It's bollocks from top to bottom mate ;)
 
I thought this as well, but it turned out the ship on the Manchester coat of arms (1842) predates the canal by 50 years (opened 1894) which is pretty conclusive.

Why? Why is that conclusive. If I draw a ship now, it can relate to anything I want it to. The ship when it appeared on the club badge was after the canal was built, and after the period of slavery. And when it was used in 2016, it could literally have referred to anything the designers thought of.

People can have a view, and can link it or any other motif to many things. But one thing that is certain, no link can ever really be 'conclusive'.
 
Why is that conclusive

It’s conclusive because you can’t invent a symbol for something that isn’t going to exist for 50 years.

The ship is from the City coat of arms, I can’t believe anyone is disputing that.

So the ship has the meaning from when it went on the coat of arms. You can’t copy a logo and then retroactively decide one element has an entirely different meaning.

I think it’s entirely fair to question if the ship is linked to cotton specifically or just represents all naval trade, but the link to the canal has obviously been invented after the fact.
 
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An interesting, well-balanced piece in the Guardian today, written by a blue, discussing the origins of the ship on our badge, and it's links to slavary in the cotton fields of America.


It's so very American to see a ship and think of slavery.
 
It’s conclusive because you can’t invent a symbol for something that isn’t going to exist for 50 years.
A, Of course you can. But that is not what I am claiming though. When the symbol appeared on the club badge, the canal had opened.

The symbol on the broader coat of arms, sure, argue away. But that doesnt mean the club badge ship does. It certailny doesn't, nor can it, make that claim conclusive.
 
A, Of course you can. But that is not what I am claiming though. When the symbol appeared on the club badge, the canal had opened.

The symbol on the broader coat of arms, sure, argue away. But that doesnt mean the club badge ship does. It certailny doesn't, nor can it, make that claim conclusive.


Every ship is evil mate, even pretend ones.
 
A, Of course you can. But that is not what I am claiming though. When the symbol appeared on the club badge, the canal had opened.

The symbol on the broader coat of arms, sure, argue away. But that doesnt mean the club badge ship does. It certailny doesn't, nor can it, make that claim conclusive.

Again, your claim is that the club adopted the coat of arms of Manchester as a crest, but secretly changed the meaning of one element to mean something else.

Quite a lot of mental gymnastics going on there.
 
It’s conclusive because you can’t invent a symbol for something that isn’t going to exist for 50 years.

The ship is from the City coat of arms, I can’t believe anyone is disputing that.

So the ship has the meaning from when it went on the coat of arms. You can’t copy a logo and then retroactively decide one element has an entirely different meaning.

I think it’s entirely fair to question if the ship is linked to cotton specifically or just represents all naval trade, but the link to the canal has obviously been invented after the fact.

I see you did your usual big edit.

My point still stands. Of course you can. They are different badges, at different times, and can symbolise com completely different things. A journalist has one view. You agree with him. Doesn't make either of you right, and it certainly isn't conclusive. Doesn't make me right either of course, but that is really my whole point. You can't claim something as conclusive based on your interpretation of it.
 

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