Ex-footballer turned pundit and property developer Gary Neville has found himself in trouble with some angry middle-aged white men for… pointing out that angry middle-aged white men are stoking division in the UK.
Neville began by talking about the recent attack on a synagogue in Manchester on Yom Kippur. He expressed his admiration of the defiance of the Jewish community.
Then, he said something that obviously pissed off a bunch of racist knobheads:
I just kept thinking as I was driving home last night, we’re all being turned on each other, and the division that’s being created is absolutely disgusting, mainly created by angry, middle-aged white men who know exactly what they’re doing.
It calls to them
Inevitably, Neville’s words word a siren song for… angry, middle-aged white men who know exactly what they’re doing:
We need to talk about Gary Neville.
He is insulting the same people who pay his wages. pic.twitter.com/zU3jp1X3Ec
— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) October 7, 2025
Angry middle-aged white men run Sky News now, do they?
And, in the same vein:
Slow-Mo Action Replay of #ReformUK mouthpiece Jeremy Kyle unwittingly proving the point made by Gary Neville.
pic.twitter.com/xaTSzhb24j
— The Rev. Anton Mittens
(@MittensOff) October 6, 2025
Seriously, this stuff was catnip for the exact kind of guy who thinks he’s ‘saying what everyone’s thinking’ whilst also believing (without a shred of irony) that he’s also becoming a minority in his own country. My God, were they seething.
Anyway, Neville carried on:
Funnily enough, on one of my development sites last week there was a Union Jack flag put up, and I took it down instantly. And some people might be watching this and thinking ‘well Gary, that weren’t patriotic’.
I played for my country 85 times, I love my country, I love England, but I’ve been building in this city for 15, 20 years, and there’s no-one put a Union Jack flag up in the last 15 to 20 years, so why’d you need to put one up now?
Quite clearly it’s sending a message to everybody that there is something you don’t like, the union jack flag being used in a negative fashion is not right. And I’m a proud supporter of England, of Great Britain, of our country, and would champion it anywhere in the world as being one of the greatest places to live. But I think we need to check ourselves and sort of start to think about bringing ourselves back to a neutral point.
Oh shit mate, you mentioned their beloved flags. Now you’re for it. Union flags and St. George’s crosses have been lining UK streets recently in what’s definitely a show of patriotism (absolutely no thinly veiled racism to see here, no sir).
Oops, you mentioned their flags
Now, obviously a lot of people – Neville included – don’t like seeing their flag used as a cheap intimidation tactic. Sorry, ‘show of patriotism which happens to coincide with the rise of the far right’. Anyway, amidst the furore, people chimed in with their support for Neville’s sentiment on Twitter:
British, middle-aged white man from a working-class background here.
I’m 100% with Gary Neville, thank you, @GNev2, for saying what so many of us are thinking.
Those few who use our flag to intimidate others aren’t patriots, they’re the opposite, and they need to be called out.
— Kev Hall (@DeKuip02) October 5, 2025
His message even reached across the 35-mile divide to touch Liverpool supporters:
Being an LFC fan, I can say Gary Neville isn't my favourite person.But I think his views on the Union Jack flags are spot on. It's not even his opinion really,it's just reality.Flags have been weaponised. As we fight amongst ourselves, the real enemies live in mansions & castles.
— Freddy'sNewNightmare (@FreddysNewN2_) October 6, 2025
The football pundit moved on to calling out Brexit for its absolutely corrosive effect on national harmony:
Brexit has had a devastating impact on this country. And the messaging is getting dangerous, extremely dangerous. All these idiots that are out there spreading hate speech, in any form, and abuse in any form, we must stop promoting them, we must stop elevating our voices towards them.
Where’s the fucking lie though?
Not listening, too angry
A lot of commentators were absolutely determined to interpret Gary’s words as blaming white racists for the Yom Kippur attack. What, cynical white men (who know exactly what they’re doing) stoking division for political point scoring? Never!
Plenty of people recognised Neville’s message just fine though:
Seeing some absolutely diabolical twisted takes on this Gary Neville video.
Are you all actually listening to what he's saying?!? He isn't blaming the flag shaggers for the dreadful synagogue attack?He criticised people fuelling division after the attack.
He didn’t say those… pic.twitter.com/Vnez8533LT
— Narinder Kaur (@narindertweets) October 5, 2025
It’s almost like they’re determined not to listen:
I see Gary Neville is getting a lot of abuse from middle aged white men, after calling out middle aged white men.
I guarantee most of them haven’t listened to word he actually said, and don’t even realise that they’re just proving his point.
— LolaElise (@LoEl81) October 5, 2025
You’re allowed to stay angry if you only ever hear things that make you furious:
Regarding Gary Neville's video.
It's amazing how so many people can listen to his words and hear something completely different to what he actually said
— Cantona Collars AKA Larry (@Cantona_Collars) October 6, 2025
Neville also faced down what’s got to be one of the shortest-lived calls for his sacking, and a ‘boycott’ against Sky Sports. Everyone’s favourite racist rag, the Daily Mail, ran with the headline:
Now Sky Sports faces BOYCOTT calls over £1.1m-a-year star Gary Neville’s ‘racist’ outburst against ‘angry middle-aged white men’ who are ‘creating division’ – as the lefty pundit reveals he tore down a Union Jack he saw on a building site
I’ve been trying to think of a way to phrase a takedown here, but honestly, Football365 demolished it more solidly than I ever could:
Good God, all that’s missing there is a ‘just hours’ before or after something completely unconnected happen/happens.
The headline alone is a piece of dreadful art.
Mentioning his wage is textbook stuff.
Calling it Gary Neville’s ‘racist’ outburst is certainly a choice, considering at no stage does he use any variation of the quoted word, nor is it contained at any other point within the article beyond the headline.
Saying ‘the lefty pundit reveals he tore down a Union Jack he saw on a building site’ is also one way of avoiding mentioning it was one of his building sites, not just a random one he ventured onto in a moment of anti-nationalist fury.
Pour the teeeaaaa. I know the Mail pumps this formulaic bullshit out at a rate of knots, but fuck me is it funny to see it laid out like that. How do you recover from that kind of inch-perfect read?
The wrong free speech
Sure enough, the folks on Twitter immediately called out the ‘free speech‘ crowd for its hypocrisy:
Gary Neville shows that even if you all you do is spit facts the Right who 'love Free Speech' will still do everything they can to cancel you.
But they failed. pic.twitter.com/XDgBAtQVv3
— BladeoftheSun (@BladeoftheS) October 7, 2025
You’re not allowed to just say it:
Gary Neville has picked the wrong kind of free speech again.
Come on Gary, this is the free speech that the chief proponents of free speech don’t like.
Everybody should know that…
— Craig. (@bambibristol) October 7, 2025
Gary left off with a message of unity, urging the UK to:
get back to a country of love, of peace, of harmony, and become a team again.
Absolutely fucking outrageous, right?
Featured image via YouTube screenshot/Sky Sports Premier League
By The Canary
This post was originally published on Canary.


(@MittensOff) 