I think I agree with Tigra's POV maybe without agreeing with what he said, or how he said it. It was only a couple weeks ago that secular Australia was arguing for a game on Good Friday. Australia is constitutionally secular and I would love to keep our sport that way. I understand that there are prayer rooms at places like transport terminals for example, in my industry I've never ever seen any thing of the sort so I guess I can't say too much about it. But my first thoughts when I heard it today on the radio was, "what's next?" As someone with a bit of a black mark in my past (think Romper Stomper or American History X), I always saw the biggest problem with racial and religious creed was the segregation and 'us and them.' I'm sure if Tigra's 'Depat Papadum' came and sat next to me at the footy in his Richmond colours, I wouldn't give a stuff his beliefs or background and we could barrack together. IMO the lines need to be erased, not emphasised.
it's only people carrying on about it that creates lines of division, or us and them. what do you lose if there is a room for someone of a different faith to go and pray?
the whole purpose of it is so those that don't go to the footy because their religious beliefs say they have to pray so many times a day, have an outlet to do so. If someone else wants to go and pray to their baby killing, spiteful, jealous god in the same room they wont be banned.
how the eff this affects anyone else has got me beat? no one loses anything. you dont have to go and watch them pray, in fact you wont even know they are doing it, as opposed to them having to do it in the car park or the public dunnies or whether they do it now.
whatever happened to live and let live? as long as they dont push their pox beliefs beliefs down anyone else's throat, who gives an eff?