Justin Trudeau lives in America, cheering on America at FIFA, with his American girlfriend, drinking American BEER
Just 12 month ago he told Canadians F*€ the 🇺🇸. Boycott U.S. travel, don’t buy anything American and BOO the 🇺🇸 national anthem at GAMES
This guy is a POS
@Keir_Starmer Funny. When did that happen ??? hmmm...
@grok When and which governments prohibited access to children, effectively dictating what they can read ?
🇨🇦 Canadian fans booed the 🇺🇸American flag at the FIFA World Cup opening ceremony.
At UFC 250, American fans stopped everything and sang the Canadian national anthem for Aiemann Zahabi.
No prompting. No politics. Just respect.
That’s the difference between a crowd following a politician’s grudge and a crowd that actually likes their neighbour.
Trudeau taught Canadians to boo.
Americans just taught us what class looks like.🇺🇸🇨🇦
🇨🇦🇺🇸👏 #WorldCup2026 #UFC250 #cdnpoli
Migrant hanging around children’s park gets taught a lesson….
Scotland 🏴
A young girl is playing in a children’s park and a migrant try’s to “chat her up”
A man goes up to him a teaches him a lesson 👍
En el islam, los perros están etiquetados como haram y "inmundos". Así es como se les enseña a los niños en Pakistán a tratarlos. Pero si te atreves a hablar, eres “islamófobo”…
Here’s something I really think needs to be pointed out about the controversy surrounding Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of The Odyssey.
The reason for the backlash goes much deeper than people just being angry about the “woke” casting. The real issue is that Nolan has built such an incredibly strong reputation that he is in a position where he could genuinely do almost anything he wanted creatively. Even if studios pushed back, he has enough influence to secure funding elsewhere or even invest his own money into the project.
What he could have done, and in my opinion should have done, was first and foremost hire a significant number of Greek actors, especially actors who are well known within Greece rather than mainstream Hollywood. That alone would have added a huge layer of authenticity to the film. Of course, you can still have some Hollywood A listers involved, but not to the point where they completely overshadow the core cast and identity of the movie.
Then there’s the most obvious point of all. Helen of Troy would not have been black, nor would a Greek goddess. That is not racism. It is simply historical and cultural accuracy. And yes, the same logic applies in reverse. It would be equally ridiculous to cast white actors as mythical African characters. That should go without saying.
Another strange decision is the language and dialogue style Nolan appears to be using. He has opted for modern American English, and it just sounds bizarre in this kind of setting. For decades, historical epics tended to use a more classical style of British English, sometimes mixed with foreign accents depending on the character. No, that was not the literal language spoken in ancient Greece or Rome, but it helped create the feeling of an older and more noble form of communication that suited the world being portrayed.
For some reason, many directors in recent years have abandoned that approach entirely and replaced it with completely modern American speech patterns, seemingly because English was never the original language anyway, so now nothing matters. I think that’s the wrong approach, and Nolan is far from the only one guilty of it. Hearing Napoleon speak with a modern American accent in Ridley Scott’s film also felt incredibly jarring.
What’s especially interesting about all of this is that we are now entering a time where AI is becoming so advanced that some kid sitting in his bedroom could eventually create a full length historical epic without capitulating to modern Hollywood trends or making the same mistakes directors like Nolan are making. And that film could potentially end up being more widely accepted and celebrated than what major studios are producing.
I think that’s the bigger lesson people like Nolan may eventually have to learn.