👀🇦🇷 Después de decir que esta vez el arbitraje no influyó, me pidieron revisar el partido con detalle y encontré esto.
Enzo Fernández, autor del gol del empate de Argentina, no debió terminar el encuentro.
Al minuto 3 lanzó un codazo en la nuca a un jugador inglés, sin ninguna posibilidad de disputar el balón. Si se hubiera aplicado el mismo rigor arbitral que vimos contra Suiza y Egipto, esa acción perfectamente pudo terminar en expulsión. Pero no solo no fue roja… ni siquiera fue amarilla.
Minutos después, el mismo Enzo cortó un contragolpe de Inglaterra con una zancadilla al borde del área. ¿La sanción? Tampoco hubo amarilla.
Desde el primer tiempo, Enzo debió estar expulsado. Si una acción así hubiera sido contra Messi, difícilmente el infractor se salvaría.
Por cierto, guarden el video porque la FIFA los anda borrando.
@RupertLowe10 Which countries fees & visas eased? China & South East Asian citizens - never see them claiming benefits in the UK and there are many wealthy UK citizens that have left the UK because their Chinese/South Asian spouse can’t get a visa. Chinese & Asian are hard working
@andyburnham going to bring Rail services in Northern England into the 21st Century? Over 5 hours West Coast to East Coast!! Distance 3 times as long down South - one hour on a fast train! Should be able to cross the North in less than a day! The north needs reconnecting!
@SkyNewsBreak@skysarahjane please highlight the huge difficulties elderly people are having who have been expats for decades now having to try to get a British passport to visit family it’s shocking! Just look on the social media groups people in their 80’s can’t visit family!
@elonmusk you seen the difficulties British Expats who’ve not had UK passports for over 50 years are having just to visit family in the UK? Poor elderly people in their 80’s being asked to get a new British passport just to visit family!
Wild ponies act as ecosystem engineers. Their grazing maintains plant diversity, preventing crowding out of wildflowers. Their hooves break up hard soil to form seedbeds. Viable seeds are dispersed across vast distances inside nutrient-rich manure. @RewildingB@WildlifeTrusts
Wild ponies act as ecosystem engineers. Their grazing maintains plant diversity, preventing crowding out of wildflowers. Their hooves break up hard soil to form seedbeds. Viable seeds are dispersed across vast distances inside nutrient-rich manure. @RewildingB@WildlifeTrusts
Natural England wants to remove 90% of Dartmoor’s ponies.
Our Exmoor ponies are next. These animals have been here for thousands of years.
A government quango, destroying the countryside and its heritage.
Natural England wants to remove 90% of Dartmoor’s ponies.
Our Exmoor ponies are next. These animals have been here for thousands of years.
A government quango, destroying the countryside and its heritage.
“I have a brilliant net zero plan. We are surrounded by natural energy resources, but let’s ignore that and buy £40 billion of oil and gas from Norway, which comes from the same sea that we share with them. Let’s spend £11.6 billion on overseas climate aid. Let’s spaff away £30bn on carbon capture machines. Let’s ban gas boilers and put in heat pumps. Let’s end new coal mining licenses and spend millions of pounds for foreign coal to keep Britain's last steel plant running. Let’s plaster solar panels on farmland, but also spend £50 million on sun dimming experiments. We will do this in a country that has the fifth least annual sunlight hours. And we will end up with the most expensive industrial electricity prices in the developed world. But shhh…let’s not talk about how much energy and water is required to power those massive AI data centres…”
A tenant farmer in the Cairngorms says land that sold for £500 an acre a few years ago now goes for £5,000. He is being moved off ground his family has worked for generations, because he cannot outbid the people buying it. The buyers are corporations, and they have no intention of farming a single acre of it.
Here is how the trick works. A company keeps emitting carbon exactly as before. Same factories, same flights, same supply chain, same product. Then it buys a Scottish hillside, plants some trees, and announces to the world that it is now carbon neutral, or, if it is feeling brave, carbon negative. The emissions never fell. It simply bought a landscape to point at.
Take BrewDog. In 2020 it bought a 9,300-acre Highland estate, propped up with public grant money, and promised a million trees and the crown of the world's first carbon negative beer business, removing twice the carbon it emitted, forever. By 2023 roughly half of the 500,000 trees it had managed to plant were dead, killed by drought, with critics noting the planting was drying out the peat and releasing carbon of its own. The advertising regulator ruled its carbon-negative claims misleading. In 2024 it quietly dropped the badge and dismissed the entire carbon credit market as a flood of cheap schemes whose benefit was "questionable, maybe even non-existent." Then it sold the estate to a firm whose actual business is selling carbon offsets.
That is the whole model in one story. Public money in. Dead trees out. A green halo worn for four years and then dropped. The farmer who used to be on that land, gone. The hillside passed to a company that exists purely to sell other people the right to keep polluting.
This is no fringe case. In one recent year, half of every estate sold in Scotland went to investment funds, corporations and charitable trusts rather than anyone who would farm it. A third of the deals for plantable land are now done off-market, in secret, precisely so the local community never gets the chance to bid.
So this is what net zero looks like on the ground. A man who produced food is priced out of his own glen. A corporation that produced emissions buys the glen, calls itself a force for good, and sells the carbon. The land stops feeding anyone. Nobody's emissions actually went down by a gram.
The food was real. The farmer was real. The carbon saving is a line in a slide deck.
And we have somehow decided the villain in all this is the man with the sheep.
Henry Nowak's last words were "I can't breathe."
The bodycam footage exists.
It was shown in court.
The public cannot see it.
Elon Musk said: "Not releasing it is an admission of guilt."
Here's what we already know from court testimony:
- Henry was stabbed, chased, and bleeding
- He scaled a fence to escape while dying
- Police arrived and handcuffed HIM - the victim
- His attacker accused him of racism
- The knife was hidden by the attacker's mother
- No officer has been suspended. Not one.
The footage that could end this cover-up exists.
British police are refusing to release it.
If you believe it should be released - sign the petition. Over 500 million people are on https://t.co/BJIuCzyTKR .
Henry deserves justice.
His family deserves the truth.
Why is the UK government still hiding it?
#JusticeForHenry #TheShift
This deserves huge credit. @GBNEWS was the *ONLY* channel to directly ask Labour about the brutal murder of Henry Nowak on the Sunday morning politics shows.
Pat McFadden was dismissive and *refused* to answer the question. Appalling response.
But thank you, @CamillaTominey.
I have written to the Chief Constable of Hampshire Police demanding the immediate release of the Henry Nowak police bodycam footage.
National Police Chiefs' Council guidance does NOT preclude releasing body-cam footage where there is an ongoing investigation, stating:
"It is important that forces are seen to be open and transparent when responding to allegations of wrongdoing" and that
"police shouldn't create a perception that police are selectively choosing when to release footage to their advantage, thus potentially undermining public confidence".
THIS IS NOT GOING AWAY.