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servile-masses-arise:

Sankt fans also have a good line in massive pretend joints
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servile-masses-arise:

Sankt Pauli supporter’s bus telling it straight: Fuck National Pride.
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hamburgistbraunweiss:

Scheiss HSV! 
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functionalcontext:

St Pauli!
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St. Pauli supporters continue their long and proud tradition of  anti-fascism with regular display of Anti-Fascist Action Ireland banner  during home games.
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r-i-o-t:

FC. Saint Pauli
Located in Hamburgs Reeperbahn - centre of the cities night life, home to the red light district - St. Pauli are a club like no other. During the mid-1980’s, the club underwent a transition to a “Kult” club. An alternative fan scene grew at the club which was based around left-wing politics and the clubs “party atmosphere”. At a time when neo-nazi football hooligans rampaged across Germany, the rise of a truly leftist opposition was a huge revelation.
The clubs fans adapted the skull and crossbones as their unnoficial logo. The club itself then became the first German team to ban open displays of fascism and nationalism in its stands. The anti-fascist nature of the teams fans often brings them into violence with far-right hooligans at away games, most recently with the fascist supporters of Hansa Rostock.
Supporters often hold demonstrations of their own, supporting squatting and low-income housing in their district. In addition, their fans have held demonstrations within the stadium; in 2002, St. Pauli fans demonstrated against advertisements by the mens magazine Maxim in their ground. The fans were angry at the adverts sexist depicitons of women; the adverts were removed. The club often prides itself on having the largest number of female fans in Germany, and its former owner, Corny Littmann, is openly gay.
The club opens every game with “Hells Bells” by ACDC, and after every goal “Song 2” by Blur is played. The clubs Fundamental Principles, passed by an owerwhelming majority at the St Pauli Congress in 2009, states that “St. Pauli FC is the club of a particular city district, and it is to this that it owes its identity” and that “tolerance and respect in mutual human relations are important pillars of the St. Pauli philosophy.” St. Pauli fans have a long history of friendship with fans of Glasgow club Celtic.