@jesse_norwalt@MattWalshBlog So your argument is basically money? You reduced justice of a little girl who has an entire life ahead of her to just “costs”, “savings” & “money”???
@Web3babie@0m0lara@gagson05 “Did” only affects the immediate verb, which in this case is “see”. It doesn’t automatically mean all the verbs in the sentence will be present tense.
Tudo na vida tem seu tempo 🫶🏾🕰️🫶🏾 honre que esteve com vc em todos os tempos !! Afinal o sonho de criança smp foi da uma vida boa pra coroa 🫶🏾🦸🏽♀️🫶🏾🤴🏾🫶🏾
Exactly! When I recruited him from our u19 team to be my assistant at the Senior Team , one journalist asked me to justify my decision.
I only told him that , with time Rulani will be better than me .There was silence in that media room and few people doubted (even within the team ) and did not understand and foresee all what I see.The worst part was again
justifying my decision to recruit him back in my technical team
after Chippa United fired him .
I could not suppress that talent that few knew about it.
End of the story , you can track his journey up to date! One day he will be back in SA to share and support the experience that he is currently gathering . 👏🏾👏🏾
Let me take you back to an interesting event from 2018.
The then FM of Austria extended a casual wedding invitation to Vladimir Putin during her diplomatic visit to Moscow.
She never imagined he would take it seriously as it was just a courtesy invitation, not an expectation.
But on August 18, 2018, a Russian state aircraft landed in Austria.
Vladimir Putin didn’t just attend the wedding. he arrived with a Cossack choir and a traditional samovar as a gift. Cameras went crazy. Music filled the air. And in a moment that would echo far beyond the dance floor, the Foreign Minister of a neutral EU nation took the hand of the Kremlin’s leader.
They waltzed. Brussels watched.
When the music ended, Karin Kneissl performed a deep, traditional Austrian curtsey.
That single bow ended her career.
Within hours, the image was weaponized. Political opponents framed it as proof of Austria’s “submission” to Moscow.
Brussels politicians, globalist elites, and her domestic critics closed ranks. She was no longer a minister she was labeled a traitor, a spy, a pariah.
Death threats followed.
Despite speaking seven languages and holding a doctorate in international law, she found herself erased almost instantly. Her bank accounts were frozen. Her name was blacklisted in her own country.
They didn’t just push her out of office. They pushed her out of entire Europe.
Kneissl first fled to France, but exile followed her there too. Her accounts were blocked again. She said pressure was placed on her landlord to evict her.
With no footing left in Europe, she moved to a small village in Lebanon, living like a peasant in quiet exile far from the halls of power she once navigated with ease.
And then came the final irony.
The woman driven out of Europe for dancing with Putin eventually found her only refuge in Russia.
She describes the financial strangulation across Europe as the decisive force behind her departure first to Lebanon, and finally eastward to Russia.
Today, she lives in Saint Petersburg, heads a geopolitical think tank, and resides in a country cottage.
Her story is not just about a dance.
It is about a continent at war with itself. About how symbolism now outweighs substance. And about how, in modern Europe, a single gesture, a bow, a waltz, one unguarded moment against the higher power can cost you everything.
They said she danced with the wolf.
And Europe elite made sure she paid the price.
That’s why you see the likes of Kaja Kallas, Ursula von der Leyen, and others obey without hesitation. No one is allowed to step out of line because they know exactly what happens when you do.