The term "Oi" was originally
Cockney, meaning "Hey". Later it became the name of a sub-genre of
punk music in England the late 1970s, originally without
racist content. Eventually
neo-nazi skinheads infected the Oi scene to the extent that those outside the scene eqated Oi with
racism, although there are still many
non-racist and
anti-racist Oi bands.
Roddy Moreno of The Oppressed, one of the most outspoken anti-racist Oi bands, said:
If you don't care, they will take your scene, they will ruin it and suck the lifeblood out of it.
When I started off, we were doing well. We had songs on compilation albums and were making the national charts. We were just looked at as a punk offshoot. But once you had bands like Skrewdriver and Brutal Attack come out, singing "white Britain," and "white power," and stuff like that, all of a sudden the media started saying we have skinhead bands here, all of a sudden no coverage at all, nobody would touch any skinhead bands. Because all skinhead bands were Oi bands, automatically Oi got painted with the same brush. So if you were Oi or skinhead, you couldn't get gigs, you couldn't play anywhere, nobody would want to put your records out. It was all because the Nazis came in and most people stood by and let it happen.
source: Soundtracks to the White Revolution: White Supremacist Assaults on Youth Music Subcultures, edited by Devin Burghart