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'Leather thong man' RIP

I'm not convinced he wore a leather thong though - wasn't it just shorts that he rolled up to make them indecently short???????

I suggest we all raise a glass of cider to commemorate his passing on Thursday.
 
I'm not convinced he wore a leather thong though - wasn't it just shorts that he rolled up to make them indecently short???????

I think I have seen him in both.

'Leather shorts rolled up really small man' doesn't trip off the tongue very easily though :D
 
I think I have seen him in both.

'Leather shorts rolled up really small man' doesn't trip off the tongue very easily though :D

Yeah, I have to admit, I always used to refer to him as 'Leather Shorts Man'; but I think you're probably right: he had the full range of outfits! :D :cool:
 
Just got back from the funeral. Colin didn't have any family so it was mainly Socialist Party members, some neighbours and work colleagues. There was a lot of faces from my political past!

Some moving tributes from Robin Clapp, Paul Moorhouse, Domenico Hill and Mark Baker.

At the end there was a rendition of The Red Flag and the Internationale, which almost made me cry.

Me & butchers are off to the pub now to raise a pint in his memory.
 
As we sat in the pub raising a toast, I suddenly remembered that CT used to call lager "trendy juice" :D

He was a character, that's for sure.
 
He had an expression for most things :cool:

I have been trying to guess who you are and failing :(

I don't come on this forum much, but Mark Baker had a copy of this thread so I looked it up.
 
This is the Obituary from the Socialist:

"Obituary Colin Toogood: 1955-2008

Socialist Party members in Bristol are sad to report the sudden death of long-standing comrade Colin Toogood.

He and I attended the same school and I first came across him one day when I entered a classroom and found him chalking ‘Long live Karl Marx’ on the blackboard. A few years later he became a supporter of Militant, never once wavering thereafter in his commitment.

Colin suffered a very difficult childhood without any support from social service or educational agencies and as a result did not always find it easy in later life to consistently fit into the expectations of mainstream society, or conventional dress codes. As soon as the sun appeared in the sky, his shorts (and boy, were they short) would appear. As spring turned into summer, even these were prone on occasion to disappear!

Whatever these secondary idiosyncrasies however, his dedication to building our forces was demonstrated over and over again by his incredible financial generosity. Inheriting £20,000 in 1988, he donated half of that to the CWI to finance its first steps in building a section in the former Soviet Union. The other half of the money was given two years later to the Federation of anti-Poll Tax Unions. So, he helped to topple both Stalinism and Margaret Thatcher. An epitaph I know he would be very pleased with.

You can have revolutionaries both wise and ignorant, intelligent or mediocre as Trotsky once observed, but the most effective revolutionaries are those that face down obstacles both personal and political, always strive to give the best they can of themselves and are prepared to back their understanding with deeds and self-sacrifice.

Colin triumphed over the traumas of his childhood and ultimately found in our party a positive purpose to his life and a role he could faithfully fulfil."
by Robin Clapp


Nice one, always a pleasure seeing him and the other member of the RSL Revolutionary Scrumpy League and their fraternal organisation RCP Revolutionary Cider Party at various Militant events.

Sad news indeed.

Cheers to Butchers for the heads up.
 
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