Topic 5567398
Fans will always be fans; they won't act differently, not to defend their club when their club is being talked badly about.
No, this has nothing to do with fans. This is solely about idiotic and bestial examples of people that need to be taught a lesson in behavior.

In my country, at the local championship, there are good rules for fans, specifically for those organized crowds that might cause trouble during their favorite team's games. This includes setting off firecrackers and throwing various objects onto the field, which could provoke unpleasant situations during the match. So these fan teams warn that their behavior could result in fines for the players themselves, regardless of whether they play well or not. I think these are good rules to curb those who sometimes act unnaturally, turning into a mob that, on the one hand, is easy to manage, but on the other, difficult to stop even for law enforcement.
Fines are good, and much better than not having any fines but often they are too low. Such completely unnecessary degenerate behavior should be heavily fined. We are not talking about justifiably charged emotional situation, say that someone just tried to beat up your sister and you had issues controlling yourself when you defended her. It is very much possible to be an extremely passionate fan about something without engaging in any disruptive or violent behavior. The issue is that a large percentage of humans need to be taught how to behave properly with punishments, whether physical or other kinds -- in this case fines. A $100 fine for throwing something hurts, but a $5000 fine is better and a fine that scales strongly upwards is the best (i.e. the more wealthy you are the higher the fine-to-wealth ratio, linear scaling is dumb).