Fédération française de football : une troisième étoile ou la faillite
Déficit de 8,7 millions d’euros en 2025, ligues régionales au bord de la faillite, note d’hôtel à Boston qui pourrait dépasser les 12 millions d’euros : la Fédération française de football (FFF) nage dans le rouge. Pourtant, ses dirigeants ont choisi la Corse et ses chambres à 520 euros la nuit pour tenir leur assemblée générale les 5 et 6 juin. Les questions qui fâchent ? On les effleurera à peine. Car la fédération a misé tout son avenir financier sur un seul pari : que Deschamps ramène la coupe à la maison. Moins un choix sportif qu’une question de survie.
Par @Romain_Molina, @xavmon et @oroulot.
➡️ https://t.co/MNr5CWEJ5G
Chicago Boy qui vient de découvrir que le capitalisme dérégulé n’aboutit pas sur une concurrence libre et non faussée comme il l’espérait mais plutôt sur des monopoles 😮
Après ma fausse villa dans le sud-ouest, voici ma fausse villa à Marseille ! Décidément, entre les ingérences étrangères d’Israël contre les insoumis et les Fake News fabriquées avec l’IA générative, la campagne présidentielle s’annonce bien !
Le gouvernement n’a pas l’air décidé à protéger les élections sérieusement. Mon conseil : vérifiez tout par vous-mêmes ! Faites fonctionner votre esprit critique en permanence !
your brain is always becoming better at whatever you repeatedly do. that’s why repetition changes people more than motivation ever will. if you spend every day stressing, overthinking, comparing yourself to strangers online, replaying old mistakes, and expecting the worst, your brain slowly starts treating those patterns like home. it begins scanning the world for more proof that you’re not enough, that life is against you, that things won’t work out. the scary part is your brain doesn’t care if the pattern is helping you or destroying you. it only cares about what gets repeated.
but the same thing works in your favor too. when you repeatedly choose discipline, growth, gratitude, focus, and belief in yourself, your brain slowly reshapes around those things as well. at first it feels unnatural because your old patterns are louder, but over time your perspective changes. challenges stop feeling like signs to quit and start feeling like part of the process. your mind becomes whatever it practices most. so be careful what you keep giving your attention to because eventually, your thoughts become your reality.
That photo costs about $17. The premium version, where the tiger’s head rests in your lap, goes for around $140. Selling these poses made Thailand’s Tiger Temple roughly $3 million a year, until police raided it in 2016 and pulled 40 dead tiger cubs out of a freezer.
Thailand has about 1,960 tigers locked in cages right now. Almost all of them are at places that sell tourist photos. The most recent Thai government count of wild tigers came back at 179 to 223. There are eight to ten times more tigers in the photo business than tigers out there hunting deer in the forest.
Police forced their way into the Tiger Temple in May 2016 and walked out with 137 live tigers. They also found 40 frozen cubs in a kitchen freezer. Twenty more cubs were floating in jars of preserving fluid. Authorities stopped a temple staff member trying to drive off the property with two whole tiger pelts, ten tiger fangs, and around 1,500 small good-luck charms made from tiger skin.
Speed breeding is what keeps the supply going. Mothers get their cubs taken at two to three weeks old. The females come back into heat much sooner and pop out another litter long before nature would let them. World Animal Protection investigators walked through Thai tiger parks and found half the cats they saw in cages smaller than a one-car garage. A wild tiger covers 10 to 20 miles in a single night.
Cubs work the photo line for a few months. They get passed from tourist to tourist hundreds of times a day. Most are declawed, which is exactly what it sounds like: amputating part of each toe so they cannot scratch a paying customer. Once a cub grows too big or starts pushing back, it is finished with the photo business and too expensive to feed.
The same animals start a second life as product. In 2007, Thailand signed an international treaty banning the sale of tiger parts. Other tiger countries signed too. Authorities still seized 641 tigers, dead or alive, in smuggling busts across Southeast Asia between 2000 and 2011. DNA tests traced 275 of those straight back to the same kind of farms that sell tourist photos. China and Vietnam are the destination, where the parts are sold as tiger bone wine, tiger skin rugs, and traditional medicine.
After the 2016 raid, the government took custody of all 147 rescued tigers. Eighty-six died within three years. Decades of speed breeding had inbred their bloodlines so badly that their immune systems were already gone by the time anyone tried to save them.
Peu d'écho sur ce procès, avec dans le box, un ancien directeur d'agence bancaire de 51 ans accusé de viols aggravés, d'actes de torture et de barbarie et de proxénétisme aggravé.
Et si peu de bruit sur le courage de la plaignante, Laëtitia, mère de famille de 42 ans de Manosque, aujourd'hui handicapée et incontinente après les sévices extrêmes subis de 2015 à 2022 : « Je ne vais pas demander le huis clos. Il m'a beaucoup tenu avec la honte pendant sept ans. »
Sept ans😱
#BREAKING Australian actress Holly Valance says that everyone “starts out as a lefty”
But then you “wake up” when you try to “run a business or buy a home”
“And then you realise how crap their ideas are”
Hard to argue, Holly.
@dryxxlovesyou Tout le monde a une part de médiocrité personne n'est parfait mais si la poto elle a vu un truc en lui déjà c ridicule de se remettre en question mdrrr et puis c'est qu'il est pas si foire que ça et qu'il ya quelque chose en dessous de tt ça mdrrr fin bon