Indeed. You will always get more people, in an abstract way, wanting to put the boot into crims rather than help them. Sad, but true.
That is correct but says nothing. You'll always get more people posting after a defeat than after a win. Same thing. Negative emotion is more readily expressed.
I'd want Ched back but would not be bothered to sign a petition saying so because I have no strong passion. I suppose most people loosely in favour of re-signing Evans would feel that way. Let's have him back - but if not, the sun will still set tomorrow and Bramall Lane will be where it's always been.
As to Jean Hatchet and her crew of online chancers, hardliners and other "put the boot inners", they should not influence the club's decision.
As so many press items in modern life, in the larger scheme of things, this is another "teacup in a storm" scenario that will quickly blow over anyway. The way the club's decision is viewed with retrospect will always be football-based. If he succeeds, few Blades will care about three to six weeks of bad press in autumn. Neither will the world at large who will shift their view and praise Evans as a case of successful rehabilitation.
If he happens to suck at footie, the ones against signing him will have shot their wad by Christmas and no longer care about the topic in May. The ones who favoured the signing, will feel they got it wrong and point to the whole hoohaa being largely in vein. I doubt anyone will truly change their moral compass either way. You feel what you feel about the issues involved. No petition or online discussion will greatly change those views.
If anything, press hysteria will create a camp mentality in some Blades who want Evans back for the sake of it and because they are told not to - reverse psychology at work.
The only really interesting thing in all of this for someone like me with a relaxed laissez-faire viewpoint somewhere in the middle has been how many extreme, deeply entrenched views the Evans affair has created or revealed. I am generally suprised why such a relatively trivial issue is build up to matter so much. He is only a footballer who returns to work, after all. He will, somewhere. Does it really make SUCH a huge difference whether that is at poxy Sheffield United, equally poxy Barnsley or, say, ever so slightly more glamorous Cardiff? I don't think so, frankly.
Has knocking down linesmen tainted us for good? Has the Battle of Bramall Lane? Has Tevezgate? Has Neil Warnock? Let's face it, we are both a very cool and exciting club that always has drama going on, and a club that to outsiders at least, is just a little too stubborn, a little too crude and never far from controversy anyway. Whatever we do, some will nail us for it. Whatever we do, Sheffield United will survive and be loved by those who have alwys loved them. The rest, as always, will use as as pantomime victims without deeply caring...