J. H. Christ. Reading some of the analysis here on the slagging of "barstoolers" by LOI fans is waaay too deep.
For as long as I can remember, football fans have been insulting other football fans on who they support.
1. Man City fans at the moment will get slagged as being former Blackburn fans back in the day and for being glory hunters.
2. Man Utd fans will be slagged for being not from Manchester.
3. Liverpool fans will be slagged for being constantly deluded about their teams chances of winning the league.
4. Celtic/Derry fans will get slagged for being Brits and not Irish.
5. Clubs from outside Dublin will be called culchies and teams from Dublin will be called heroin addicted, thieving scumbags.
Slagging/insulting is part of football. So if a "barstooler" gets insulted by a LOI fan for following a foreign team and not an Irish team, and he takes this to heart, then maybe he should stop following football. If it's his reason for not going to matches, then he needs to develop a thicker skin as a football fan. ( I'd assume it was just an excuse if someone told me they didn't go to LOI because of their perception of LOI fans having superiority complexes).
Similarly LOI fans get insulted when told that the standard is crap.
Some people who take this issue way too seriously need to learn to ignore the insults if they can't take it and lighten up a bit IMO.


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- but it can't be a bad thing to have at least a discussion about it. Inter-club rivalry operates via a different dynamic altogether. For example, Manchester City fans slagging United fans for not being from Manchester is an intentional means of winding the United faithful up; it's a way for City fans to reassure themselves they're "more authentic" than their "glory-hunting" out-of-city counterparts. As far as I know, City fans generally have no interest in trying to convince such United supporters that City is actually the club for them. They want nothing to do with them. They just use them as ego boosters. On the other hand, most LOI fans would love to see the general Irish public get behind the league. Throwing insults and polarising potential partners would thus be counter-productive, surely?

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