FORUMS FORUMS






RLFANS.COM
Celebrating
25 years service to
the Rugby League
Community!

   WWW.RLFANS.COM • View topic - What's the alternative to capitalism?
::Off-topic discussion.
Richie 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman17134No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 22 200123 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
11th Sep 20 21:449th Aug 20 18:21LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Johannesberg, South Africa
Signature
Northampton RL....details here: //www.northamptonrl.co.uk

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Wed Jan 08, 2014 5:56 pm  
Mintball wrote:
That's sophistry.

This country has the Red Cross handing out food parcels, Save the Children spending money here and foodbanks growing at a massive rate.

A thousand years ago, one might have walked outside and got a few sticks to lay a fire to keep warm and to cook. One might have gone hunting for food or picked fruits and nuts and mushrooms etc.

Try doing that these days – not least in the urban environments in which most people live (having been herded, in effect, into them after enclosure and deforestation, in order to work in industry for the benefit of a limited number of people).

I mentioned in one of the comments I copied over at the top of this thread that the likes of Richer Sounds and John Lewis can treat their workforce decently and still be hugely successful, profitable companies. It is, at base, a moral/ethical decision to decide to do otherwise, although (as has been discussed here before) being listed means that the City applies artificial pressures on businesses (constant growth at rates determined by the City to be acceptable) that put increased pressure on companies to 2stop treating employees as an investment and start seeing them simply as a cost to be cut.

If the wealth – no matter how great – is not shared around more equally than it ever was, and takes account of the cost of living, then it is meaningless to talk of whether the world is wealthier, as a whole, than it was a millennia ago.


I think you're being a little harsh on the world to suggest the argument is misleading or fallacious.

Did we not have charitable organisations in the past? I'm sure any lesser charitable capability over most of history was more due to less capacity to give than more requirement for charity.

Would you like to look for sticks for fire and shelter tonight? Or would you prefer to go into a warm home with central heating? Something not available to most of the country just a generation or two ago.

I haven't made reference to levels of capitalism, I'm just pointing out to Smokey that he's being overly pessimistic in his zero sum belief. I recall I started a thread some time back asking if there was a winner and a loser in a transaction. The majority view was that most transactions should be and are beneficial for both parties (the cliched win/win) otherwise they wouldn't happen.

FWIW I work for a major corporation, publicly owned. Despite being publicly owned and aggressively pursuing growth we seem well regarded as an ethical and responsible company by both our employees, clients and shareholders.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman9565No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
May 08 200223 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
12th Dec 19 13:0211th Dec 19 22:00LINK
Milestone Posts
5000
10000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
10 mins walk from Suncorp Stadium

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Wed Jan 08, 2014 11:26 pm  
The most obvious flaw in the current capitalist system is pay. Whoever has the ability to do so will generally line their own pockets at others' expense - whether that be senior executives, or in some cases unionised workforces where the power lies with workers.

The whole executive pay issue is a real bugbear for me, and I personally cannot see how anyone can defend the way the system works. Its a crock to talk of senior managers in established firms being paid so much because they return value to shareholders, because they still get paid when they go belly up - even walking away with massive payouyts for complete failure. In economic terms there is virtually no link between risk and return in executive pay.

I've mentioned before the idea of a multiple of salary system - nobody being able to earn more than "X" times the lowest paid full-time equivalent. That doesn't top someone from being able to earn a decent amount at the top, but ensures some degree of fariness to all.

I'd also remove the ability to pay anybody in anything other than wages. I've developed executive pay schemes in the past, and they are generally intended to align managers' interests with shareholders. The problem is that they are always one-way - managers take the upswings but won't countenance losing megabucks when the shareholders suffer, and they almost always morph into tax avoidance schemes rather than incentive schemes.

The whole process of setting executive pay is one of a members' club basically setting their mates pay and their mates doing the same for them. As I say, do away with the lot of it, introduce some very clear rules for the payment across the business as a whole and all of a sudden you'll find CEOs actually being interested in what cleaners earn.

But nobody should pretend that its just executives that do this. It is whoever has the power in bargaining. Sometimes unions do exactly the same.

A recent example of the unions using their power to effectively extort rates way above market is shown in the now soon-to-disappear car industry in Australia, where wage rates are double those in the US. Some of the other Enterprise Bargaining Arrangements were quite simply absurd - workers in the car industry were virtually unsackable, all union reps were allowed 10 days a year for union-related "training", something like one union rep for every 6/7 workers etc. Basically the unions had the power and got their noses in the trough.

We've seen similar boom-bust short-termism from unions in mining and related sectors, which are now feeling the crunch.

At both sides of the spectrum there really needs to be an understanding that eveyone can get paid more if a company is doing well, but not if they aren't.
Sadly it seems to be human nature for some people to solely focus on how much they can get at the expense of everyone else.
RankPostsTeam
Club Owner22777
JoinedServiceReputation
May 24 200619 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
26th Jun 20 13:357th Feb 18 22:08LINK
Milestone Posts
20000
25000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
//www.pngnrlbid.com

bUsTiNyAbALLs wrote:
Do not converse with me you filthy minded deviant.


vastman wrote:
My rage isn't impotent luv, I'm frothing at the mouth actually.

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 9:27 am  
Richie wrote:
So it's clearly not "zero sum" when we are wealthier in terms of not being killed by polio for one. If you don't measure wealth in terms of health, lifestyle, enjoyment, longevity, then what's the point of wealth?
We are wealthier in that respect, we are also wealthier in the respect that the black plague and leprosy aren’t here any more. We are less wealthy in the facts that we have less space, less time, less forestry, more things cost money which were previously free, there is less wildlife (a food source), no space for farming, housing is ridiculously more expensive lcoking in a high proportion of a persons wealth.

How do we absolutely value each of those things to discover whether or not we have more or less than we did?

Your sums assume that the values of the products and services are equal to all parties at all times.
My sum assumes the capitalist hypothesis that market efficiencies will value the product correctly.
RankPostsTeam
Club Owner22777
JoinedServiceReputation
May 24 200619 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
26th Jun 20 13:357th Feb 18 22:08LINK
Milestone Posts
20000
25000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
//www.pngnrlbid.com

bUsTiNyAbALLs wrote:
Do not converse with me you filthy minded deviant.


vastman wrote:
My rage isn't impotent luv, I'm frothing at the mouth actually.

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 9:41 am  
Richie wrote:
I think you're being a little harsh on the world to suggest the argument is misleading or fallacious.

Did we not have charitable organisations in the past? I'm sure any lesser charitable capability over most of history was more due to less capacity to give than more requirement for charity.

Would you like to look for sticks for fire and shelter tonight? Or would you prefer to go into a warm home with central heating? Something not available to most of the country just a generation or two ago.

I haven't made reference to levels of capitalism, I'm just pointing out to Smokey that he's being overly pessimistic in his zero sum belief. I recall I started a thread some time back asking if there was a winner and a loser in a transaction. The majority view was that most transactions should be and are beneficial for both parties (the cliched win/win) otherwise they wouldn't happen.

FWIW I work for a major corporation, publicly owned. Despite being publicly owned and aggressively pursuing growth we seem well regarded as an ethical and responsible company by both our employees, clients and shareholders.

I actually think you are closer perhaps to what I was saying. Which wasn’t that profit should never be made, but simply that profit shouldn’t be at the expense of one of the parties in the transaction. I could grow my own tomatoes, i can pay more and buy them from a shop. I accept being the ‘loser’ in the transaction when I buy tomatoes from a shop. But if the shop suddenly started charging £200 per tomato, or paying a penny a ton for them from the farmer. Yet the shop declared massive profits. I would have a problem with that. That was my point. That buying as cheap as you can, and selling as high as you can shouldn’t be your over-riding aim. The clichéd win-win should be. So if we all remembered that if we get something ‘cheap’, we are, for whatever reason, talking something from someone for less than its worth we might approach transactions a bit more reasonably and avoid the exploitation and avarice so common in big business.
Richie 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman17134No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 22 200123 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
11th Sep 20 21:449th Aug 20 18:21LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Johannesberg, South Africa
Signature
Northampton RL....details here: //www.northamptonrl.co.uk

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 10:10 am  
SmokeyTA wrote:
We are wealthier in that respect, we are also wealthier in the respect that the black plague and leprosy aren’t here any more. We are less wealthy in the facts that we have less space, less time, less forestry, more things cost money which were previously free, there is less wildlife (a food source), no space for farming, housing is ridiculously more expensive lcoking in a high proportion of a persons wealth.

How do we absolutely value each of those things to discover whether or not we have more or less than we did?

My sum assumes the capitalist hypothesis that market efficiencies will value the product correctly.


So significantly wealthier in many respects, glad we agree on some. On those where we don't, I would challenge your negativity towards the modern world. It wasn't that long ago when most factory and farm workers worked a six or a six and a half day week. Did they have more time? Not to mention we live for a longer time too.
You mention cost of housing, but we live in bigger houses than prior generations. Perhaps if we downsized the cost would be less, but we seem to prefer to pay for size.
On food....how often do you eat meat? Compare that to a generation or two ago and I'm sure you will find you are better off.

Your sum is just wrong then. It's a basic fact of economics that different people value products and services differently, and the same people value products and services differently at different times.
Richie 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman17134No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 22 200123 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
11th Sep 20 21:449th Aug 20 18:21LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Johannesberg, South Africa
Signature
Northampton RL....details here: //www.northamptonrl.co.uk

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 10:14 am  
SmokeyTA wrote:
I actually think you are closer perhaps to what I was saying. Which wasn’t that profit should never be made, but simply that profit shouldn’t be at the expense of one of the parties in the transaction. I could grow my own tomatoes, i can pay more and buy them from a shop. I accept being the ‘loser’ in the transaction when I buy tomatoes from a shop. But if the shop suddenly started charging £200 per tomato, or paying a penny a ton for them from the farmer. Yet the shop declared massive profits. I would have a problem with that. That was my point. That buying as cheap as you can, and selling as high as you can shouldn’t be your over-riding aim. The clichéd win-win should be. So if we all remembered that if we get something ‘cheap’, we are, for whatever reason, talking something from someone for less than its worth we might approach transactions a bit more reasonably and avoid the exploitation and avarice so common in big business.




There is very rarely a lose/win transaction. You haven't "lost" in the tomato transaction. You could produce your own tomatoes, but it would almost certainly cost you more (in time, money for seeds, space, housing, food and soil) than simply buying them from a shop. If the shop priced tomatoes at £200, you wouldn't buy them. If the shop offered the farmer 1p a ton, he wouldn't sell them to that shop.

Have you ever sold something for less that it was worth to you, or bought something for more than it was worth to you?
RankPostsTeam
Club Owner22777
JoinedServiceReputation
May 24 200619 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
26th Jun 20 13:357th Feb 18 22:08LINK
Milestone Posts
20000
25000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
//www.pngnrlbid.com

bUsTiNyAbALLs wrote:
Do not converse with me you filthy minded deviant.


vastman wrote:
My rage isn't impotent luv, I'm frothing at the mouth actually.

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 10:38 am  
Richie wrote:
There is very rarely a lose/win transaction. You haven't "lost" in the tomato transaction. You could produce your own tomatoes, but it would almost certainly cost you more (in time, money for seeds, space, housing, food and soil) than simply buying them from a shop. If the shop priced tomatoes at £200, you wouldn't buy them. If the shop offered the farmer 1p a ton, he wouldn't sell them to that shop.
Im not sure any of that is relevant, it was a hypothetical example. There are many things I would buy simply because it is easier to buy them. I know that the cost of the labour and raw materials and time effort and skill that goes in to that is far more than it would cost me to do so myself. I have no problem with this as long as this difference is reasonable. The free-market economic thinking that the market would set what is reasonable has been proven time and time again to be false, as time and time again large corporations, through things like exploiting their market position to shut out competitors, like using their market position to exploit their suppliers etc etc, create a market where someone is being exploited for their own profits.

Have you ever sold something for less that it was worth to you, or bought something for more than it was worth to you?
Yes. I need to heat and light my house. I don’t have a choice about that. The modern world and modern house doesn’t function without it. The cost of making and supplying me with electricity and gas throughout the energy chain, exploits that need and means I have to pay a far higher price than the cost of the service or what I would value it at.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
In The Arms of 13 Angels14522No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200223 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
30th Jan 14 14:039th Jan 14 11:22LINK
Milestone Posts
10000
15000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Online
Signature
Freedom without Socialism is privilege and injustice.
Socialism without freedom is slavery and brutality.

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 11:22 am  
rumpelstiltskin wrote:
That's not how I read your original post, in which you postulated the theory that all large business was inherently amoral due to the need to maximise profit. I don't agree with you, and offered up a small business for comparison, and am still waiting to hear from you if think a small business, following the same business plan of maximising their profits, was also amoral...

All businesses have the potential to be moral/immoral depending on how they are run, there is nothing inherently or automatically moral or immoral in business unless steps are taken to make it so.
Richie mentions one company which has put morality into the way it conducts its business (with which I concur) but many others have not.
Hence we cannot assume that any one company, large or small, will conduct itself morally and we must assume a baseline of amoral ... which is why regulation is necessary and why constant re-examination of that regulation is also necessary.

rumpelstiltskin wrote:
And as there have been Rules and Regulations governing commerce from the year dot, and accepted, sometimes grudgingly by most as a fact of life, (apart from the criminal element),..

Quite so.
Do you accept that regulation is necessary?

rumpelstiltskin wrote:
I'm not sure that more of the same is really going to improve everyone's lot.

So, you don't think that, for example, the banks were under-regulated?
If so, we disagree.
Richie 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman17134No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Dec 22 200123 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
11th Sep 20 21:449th Aug 20 18:21LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Johannesberg, South Africa
Signature
Northampton RL....details here: //www.northamptonrl.co.uk

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 12:44 pm  
SmokeyTA wrote:
Im not sure any of that is relevant, it was a hypothetical example. There are many things I would buy simply because it is easier to buy them. I know that the cost of the labour and raw materials and time effort and skill that goes in to that is far more than it would cost me to do so myself. I have no problem with this as long as this difference is reasonable. The free-market economic thinking that the market would set what is reasonable has been proven time and time again to be false, as time and time again large corporations, through things like exploiting their market position to shut out competitors, like using their market position to exploit their suppliers etc etc, create a market where someone is being exploited for their own profits.


Has it been proved false? What has been priced at a price point it doesn't work to transact at that price point?

SmokeyTA wrote:
Yes. I need to heat and light my house. I don’t have a choice about that. The modern world and modern house doesn’t function without it. The cost of making and supplying me with electricity and gas throughout the energy chain, exploits that need and means I have to pay a far higher price than the cost of the service or what I would value it at.


So you are voluntarily paying a price you think is wrong? Why are you paying that? It's not like there aren't alternatives. Alternatives from different energy suppliers, different fuel types you can use in your house (gas, electric, coal, wood, your own solar panels etc) or ways you can use less energy whether that means insulating your home more or insulating yourself (I'm wearing a single layer sweathshirt but could choose to wear more for example)
Considering all those options you seem to have declined to use and instead continue to pay a price you say is higher that you value it at shows that it actually is a price you value it at or even lower.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Club Coach16271
JoinedServiceReputation
Oct 12 200420 years76th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
23rd Nov 24 21:1723rd Nov 24 19:55LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
Challenge Cup winners 2009 2010 2012 2019
League Leaders 2011 2016

Re: What's the alternative to capitalism? : Thu Jan 09, 2014 12:51 pm  
There are some great posts on this thread.

In debates about capitalism I usually find myself at odds with the lefties because I am a defender of capitalism and the market system. However, I think supporters of capitalism have to be honest, and not disingenuous about the financial crisis, the root causes, and address it so it doesn't happen again - and not use it as an opportunity to further their own political position which I saw summed up wonderfully on Twitter once as: "the poor have too much and should have less; the rich don't have enough and should have more".

A lot of the voices of the right defend capitalism and criticise government and want the size of the state to be reduced: this is fair enough there is an ideological position here from the likes of Milton Friedman. The Friedman style intellectual argument, that was basically people act more responsibly when they face the consequences of their actions, so the state shouldn't provide a 'safety net' as it will be abused. However the modern day right wing position has moved to one where the state should provide a safety net, not for the poor but to cover the exposure to losses of those that want to get rich by excessive risk taking. They want a one-way bet: they profit from the rewards when risks come off, but the taxpayer absorbs the losses if risks go wrong.

Where the hypocrisy really gets my goat, is the financial services industry and its advocates like to bite the hand that feeds them: they strongly resist any attempt to regulate their practices, and say government should "get out of the way", they allow governments to spend huge sums bailing them out when they collapse, and then they point to government debt and change the argument to "the problem is one of government debt, so governments should reduce their expenditure on welfare and public services"....notably not that they should stop covering losses in the private sector!

The reason they can do this is because especially in the USA, the banking sector has a lot of patronage to give away to those in government or in the academic field of economics. If you are influential in either of those sectors, and hold a position thats friendly to the banking sector, you can expect to be rewarded with a very high paying position in the banking sector as your next career move.

The real cause behind the financial crisis was the creation of financial products that disguised the underlying risk of an asset: eg if you make multiple subprime loans (to families that are never going to be in a position to pay them back) but can package them together in a way that allows you to sell on those loans without the buyer of the loans knowing how high the risk of default was, then you can make money by making a loan to someone that can't pay back, then selling on the loan at a profit, and when the default comes in its the party you sold it on to that loses out. When lenders worked out how to do this it was easy money and they deliberately made loans to people on low or no incomes, in the knowledge they would likely default, but in the knowledge that it would be someone else's problem.

Now of course they like to turn the blame on the poor: "well people shouldn't have taken out the loans then if they can't afford to repay them". Yes thats true, but if you ask me to look after £1000 for you, and when you come to ask for it back I say actually I loaned it to a homeless person at 10% interest but I haven't seen him since, your anger is going to be focused on me not the homeless person....
PreviousNext

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 123 guests

REPLY

Subject: 
Message:
   
Please note using apple style emoji's can result in posting failures.
Use the FULL EDITOR to better format content or upload images, be notified of replies etc...

Return to The Sin Bin


RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
3m
Film game
karetaker
5782
4m
Getting a new side to gel
Bull Mania
5
31m
Transfer Talk V5
Swoggy Loine
526
44m
Pre Season - 2025
Chris71
195
56m
ALL NEW 49ERS ERA LEEDS UTD THREAD
chapylad
2613
Recent
Shirt reveal coming soon
FIL
12
Recent
Salary Cap Changes Blocked - 11 votes to 1
NickyKiss
15
Recent
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
63276
Recent
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
40810
Recent
Mike Cooper podcast
rubber ducki
2
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
14s
Pre Season - 2025
Chris71
195
30s
Mat Crowther pre season update
Dunkirk Spir
1
37s
Salary Cap Changes Blocked - 11 votes to 1
NickyKiss
15
40s
Shopping list for 2025
HU8HFC
5588
1m
New Kit
Wires71
71
1m
Transfer Talk V5
Swoggy Loine
526
2m
2025 Recruitment
Pyrah123
212
2m
How many games will we win
Trojan Horse
50
3m
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
40810
3m
Salford
rubber ducki
61
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
Mat Crowther pre season update
Dunkirk Spir
1
TODAY
Mike Cooper podcast
rubber ducki
2
TODAY
Shirt reveal coming soon
FIL
12
TODAY
Opening Championship and League One Fixtures for 2025 Released
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Getting a new side to gel
Bull Mania
5
TODAY
Fixtures
Deadcowboys1
13
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
RLFANS Match Centre
Matches on TV
Thu 13th Feb
SL
20:00
Wigan-Leigh
Fri 14th Feb
SL
20:00
Hull KR-Castleford
SL
20:00
Catalans-Hull FC
Sat 15th Feb
SL
15:00
Leeds - Wakefield
SL
17:30
St.Helens-Salford
Sun 16th Feb
SL
15:00
Huddersfield-Warrington
Thu 20th Feb
SL
20:00
Wakefield - Hull KR
Fri 21st Feb
SL
20:00
Warrington-Catalans
SL
20:00
Hull FC-Wigan
Sat 22nd Feb
SL
15:00
Salford-Leeds
SL
20:00
Castleford-St.Helens
Sun 23rd Feb
SL
14:30
Leigh-Huddersfield
Thu 6th Mar
SL
20:00
Hull FC-Leigh
Fri 7th Mar
SL
20:00
Castleford-Salford
SL
20:00
St.Helens-Hull KR
Sat 8th Mar
SL
17:30
Catalans-Leeds
Sun 9th Mar
SL
17:30
Warrington - Wakefield
SL
17:30
Wigan-Huddersfield
Thu 20th Mar
SL
20:00
Salford-Huddersfield
Fri 21st Mar
SL
20:00
St.Helens-Warrington
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Mens Betfred Super League XXVIII ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wigan 29 768 338 430 48
Hull KR 29 731 344 387 44
Warrington 29 769 351 418 42
Leigh 29 580 442 138 33
Salford 28 556 561 -5 32
St.Helens 28 618 411 207 30
 
Catalans 27 475 427 48 30
Leeds 27 530 488 42 28
Huddersfield 27 468 658 -190 20
Castleford 27 425 735 -310 15
Hull FC 27 328 894 -566 6
LondonB 27 317 916 -599 6
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Betfred Championship 2024 ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wakefield 27 1032 275 757 52
Toulouse 26 765 388 377 37
Bradford 28 723 420 303 36
York 29 695 501 194 32
Widnes 27 561 502 59 29
Featherstone 27 634 525 109 28
 
Sheffield 26 626 526 100 28
Doncaster 26 498 619 -121 25
Halifax 26 509 650 -141 22
Batley 26 422 591 -169 22
Swinton 28 484 676 -192 20
Barrow 25 442 720 -278 19
Whitehaven 25 437 826 -389 18
Dewsbury 27 348 879 -531 4
Hunslet 1 6 10 -4 0
RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
3m
Film game
karetaker
5782
4m
Getting a new side to gel
Bull Mania
5
31m
Transfer Talk V5
Swoggy Loine
526
44m
Pre Season - 2025
Chris71
195
56m
ALL NEW 49ERS ERA LEEDS UTD THREAD
chapylad
2613
Recent
Shirt reveal coming soon
FIL
12
Recent
Salary Cap Changes Blocked - 11 votes to 1
NickyKiss
15
Recent
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
63276
Recent
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
40810
Recent
Mike Cooper podcast
rubber ducki
2
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
14s
Pre Season - 2025
Chris71
195
30s
Mat Crowther pre season update
Dunkirk Spir
1
37s
Salary Cap Changes Blocked - 11 votes to 1
NickyKiss
15
40s
Shopping list for 2025
HU8HFC
5588
1m
New Kit
Wires71
71
1m
Transfer Talk V5
Swoggy Loine
526
2m
2025 Recruitment
Pyrah123
212
2m
How many games will we win
Trojan Horse
50
3m
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
40810
3m
Salford
rubber ducki
61
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
Mat Crowther pre season update
Dunkirk Spir
1
TODAY
Mike Cooper podcast
rubber ducki
2
TODAY
Shirt reveal coming soon
FIL
12
TODAY
Opening Championship and League One Fixtures for 2025 Released
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Getting a new side to gel
Bull Mania
5
TODAY
Fixtures
Deadcowboys1
13
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS


Visit the RLFANS.COM SHOP
for more merchandise!