@deafspraaktv@Fgandoul Je moet niet vrijkomen van je cultuur. Diversiteit moet ons sterker maken. We moeten ons met zijn allen terug wat gedragen. Algemene normen en waarden respecteren. En vooral als het fout loopt elkaar hier kunnen op aanspreken en terechtwijzen binnen en buiten je gemeenschap.
Miroslav Klose: "I stopped playing football because I no longer recognised it. Today, young players think about other things. As a child, I only thought about training and becoming someone in this sport that I always loved. At Lazio and in the national team, after each training session, I put myself in a bathtub full of ice to avoid injuries. But the young players on the team systematically refused.
When they saw me picking up the bags of balls to put them away at the end of training, they said to me 'But who tells you to do that?'
At that moment, I said to myself: 'You're 20 years old and you can't help a 60-year-old worker?'
They care more about whether their boots go with their socks. That's why I said stop. The football I knew no longer exists.
Today's young players think first of cars, contracts with their sponsors, and their new boots. It is only after all these things that football comes. For them, their image is the most important thing. Whereas for me, all that mattered was football in its purest form."
@FionaFeagle En toch vinden ondernemers niet voldoende goed geschoolde en gemotiveerde werknemers of kunnen ondernemers niet aan de verwachtingen van jonge werknemers voldoen ... heel moeilijk maar uitdagend de gulden middenweg of trigger te vinden wat beide partijen opnieuw kan verbinden.
toch een sterke maar helaas ouder wordende generatie X ... Voor het eerst delen zes generaties dezelfde straten, werkvloer en zorgen. Vul je leeftijd, gemeente en geslacht in en ontdek jouw plek in het tijdperk van #Gen6. https://t.co/GYbs0jzQ31
@Arctonauts@NMBS @Londerzeel1840 De eigenaar van de krantenwinkel er recht tegenover doet in de winter normaal de wachtzaal altijd open en niet de @NMBS best eens aan hem vragen
#JDNproject • Togther with @WillemenGroep, we we're appointed to transform the A12 intersection in #Londerzeel. Our main objective: smoother and safer traffic, for pedestrians, cyclists and motorized vehicles.
More details: https://t.co/dY5Osy4Rfc
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#WegenEnVerkeer#AWV#A12
“Je kan uw economie en samenleving niet construeren op een dienstenverhaal alleen.”
@devosmarc vindt dat Europa ook op “maakindustrie” moet blijven inzetten.
#deafspraak
This referee is the worst referee ever.
Openda gets pushed against the ball while the ball doesn’t even change directions and the ref calls handball
While the SVK player can push the ball away without a punishment.
This ref is only at the Euro because he got beaten up #BelSvk
BREAKING:
Kylian Mbappé calls on the French youth to vote against Marine Le Pen
“I’m calling to vote against extremists that want to divide the country. I want to be proud to wear this shirt, I don't want to represent a country that doesn't represent my values."
A friend to me has no race, no class and belongs to no minority. My friendships are formed out of affection, mutual #respect, and a feeling of having something in common. These are eternal #values that cannot be classified. Dixit #franksinatra
Frank Sinatra was a fervent anti-racist and an early activist during the civil rights movement. He refused to stay at hotels and play at clubs that did not admit black people. His band would also provide equal pay and treatment for black musicians. It was through his relentless and tireless efforts that Las Vegas quickly became integrated.
In an interview in 2016, Frank Sinatra, Jr. had this to say about his father: "In the days when Las Vegas began to become popular, the black performers could play in showrooms, but they couldn't stay in the hotel. And it was Frank Sinatra who went to the board of directors, who had rather shady pasts, and he said, 'Are you guys going to come into the twentieth century, or aren't you?'... Somebody said 'Well, we have white people, we have black people." Sinatra, the story goes, said to them, 'The money is green. How about that?' And they began to look at each other, and the wheels were turning, and because of Sammy (Davis), Las Vegas became integrated.
Sinatra was also a significant supporter of Martin Luther King and helped him raise money to support the Civil Rights Movement by headlining fundraisers. In 1958, he wrote in Ebony Magazine: "A friend to me has no race, no class and belongs to no minority. My friendships are formed out of affection, mutual respect, and a feeling of having something in common. These are eternal values that cannot be classified."