We have two female NYSC corps members serving in our Office.
One is very friendly. She greets everyone, gets along with the staff, and people genuinely enjoy working with her.
The other can be quite rude. Staff members complain about her attitude regularly.
They’ll be passing out soon, and our boss asked HR to evaluate them because he wants to retain only one person.
The rude one is exceptionally smart. She joined the marketing department and has already closed a deal, while the friendly one is still learning and trying to figure out the job.
If they retain the rude one, she’ll likely produce great results, but her attitude is a major concern.
HR asked everyone for their opinion. Out of 10 staff members, 8 said they shouldn’t retain her. One person even volunteered to train the friendly one. 😂
Character is everything.
🚨 EXCL: Bruno Guimaraes informs Newcastle United of wish to leave & join Arsenal. #AFC stepping up pursuit - ready to offer deal worth up to £60m at present but no club-to-club contact yet + #NUFC stance still not entertaining bids for 28yo @TheAthleticFC https://t.co/6W3cpcqKKh
🚨 José Mourinho on Argentina’s comeback and the controversial officiating vs Egypt
🗣️ “Argentina are a very, very good team. No doubt about that. They have quality, they have experience, they have the mentality of champions. To come back from 2-0 down against a team that was playing with so much confidence, organisation and threat on the counter — that shows exactly why they are where they are. They never give up, they keep believing until the last second, and tonight they showed it again. Respect to them for that.
But… and it’s a big but… with the right officiating, this game could have gone either way. And it could have gone either way without any controversy. Tonight the officiating was wrong on so many accounts. Not one or two marginal decisions — many. The disallowed goal for Egypt, the way certain situations were interpreted, the consistency… or lack of it. These are not small things when the game is so tight and both teams are giving everything.
I am not saying Argentina didn’t deserve to win. They showed character and quality to turn it around. But when the decisions go so heavily in one direction, when you see clear situations handled in one way and similar ones in another, it changes the game. It changes the emotion, it changes the fairness, and it changes the story of the match.
Egypt played with heart, they took the lead, they had moments where they could have killed the game, and then decisions started going against them. That is difficult to accept when you prepare so well and you fight so hard. The referees have a very difficult job, I know that. But when there are so many wrong decisions in one game, it becomes impossible not to talk about it.
Argentina are strong enough to win without help. Tonight they didn’t need it, but the way the game was refereed created unnecessary questions. Football deserves better than that.”
🚨 Peter Drury Breaks Silence: Questionable Calls, Cancelled Goals & FIFA Favouritism – Has Football Become a Scripted Show?
🗣Peter Drury
“After years spent analyzing football matches and commentating on the game at the highest level, I can honestly say that what we witnessed today between Argentina and Egypt was unlike anything I’ve seen in my entire career.
How that was awarded as a penalty remains a complete mystery. The contact, if any, looked minimal at best, yet the decision stood. It’s becoming harder and harder to watch the sport without feeling that the beautiful game is slowly turning into something of a joke for millions of fans around the world. The officiating has been strangely “clean” almost suspiciously so yet it leaves serious questions about consistency and impartiality.
Then there was Egypt’s goal, ruled out for reasons that still aren’t entirely clear. Why was it disallowed? In the same match, when Argentina scored their decisive goal, there appeared to be a clear foul in the build-up that neither the referee nor VAR chose to review properly. These are the moments that make supporters feel the outcome is no longer decided purely on the pitch.
There’s a growing narrative out there and it’s hard to ignore that Lionel Messi is being protected as FIFA’s golden boy. With Cristiano Ronaldo no longer part of the international scene, some believe the powers that be are determined to keep Messi’s story alive for as long as possible because his presence still drives massive global interest and viewing figures. Whether that’s true or not, the pattern of decisions in key moments only fuels that conversation.
passion, and the unpredictable nature of who wins on any given day. But when decisions repeatedly go one way, when valid goals are chalked off and questionable ones are given, and when VAR seems to miss obvious incidents, it starts to feel like something else is at play. The game deserves better. Fans deserve transparency, consistency, and the simple belief that the result is earned not influenced.
These are the moments that test our love for the sport. And right now, that love is being stretched thin.“
Feel sorry for Egypt, they were not just playing against 11 men they were playing against a whole corrupt institution which goes beyond this football game.
🚨🗣️ Mostafa Ziko: "Congratulations to Argentina on the World Cup; the tournament was rigged, they didn't need anything else."
"The referee was unfair, unfair, unfair, unfair."
Madame Celeste Amarilla,
Vous êtes une femme méprisable et indigne de sa fonction.
Vous ne représentez pas le Paraguay, ce pays qui a transpiré la passion et l’honneur tout au long de la compétition. Par votre inconscience et votre racisme décomplexé, le monde entier a déjà oublié le parcours et l’effort historique que vos joueurs ont réalisés durant cette coupe du monde pour laisser place à une dame incompétente donnant la pire image possible de son pays.
Je ne laisserai jamais aux gens comme elle, la liberté de laisser propager leur haine et leur racisme à travers le monde.