En el mejor momento del partido Holanda - JapĂłn: Pausa de hidrataciĂłn. En un estadio con aire acondicionado. Infantino, acabaste con el fĂștbol por unos dĂłlares.
In Mozambico, scampati all'inferno degli Shabaab che hanno causato solo in maggio lo sfollamento di 12000 persone. Non hanno documenti, cibo, acqua e mendicano della farina di manioca x sopravvivere. L'Occidente decide chi ha diritto all'asilo ma non li prende in considerazione!
đšđŁïžNew: Zlatan Ibrahimovic on Vinicius Junior refusing the mandatory halftime interview with FIFA at the World Cup:
âPeople are shocked that VinĂcius walked away from a halftime interview. I am shocked that anyone thinks he should have stopped in the first place.
Halftime is not a television studio. Halftime is not a podcast. Halftime is not a red carpet. Halftime is the heartbeat of a football match.
For 45 minutes, players are warriors in a storm. They run, they fight, they suffer, they bleed. Then they get 15 precious minutes to recover, to breathe, to listen, to think. And FIFA wants to spend part of that time chasing soundbites? That is like pulling a Formula 1 driver out of his car during a pit stop and asking him how the race is going.
And FIFAâs idea is to shove a microphone in the playerâs face and ask, âHow do you feel?â
How do you think he feels? Heâs exhausted.
This is modern footballâs biggest disease. Everything is content. Everything is sponsorship. Everything is television. The match hasnât even finished and theyâre already trying to manufacture headlines.
They tell us they care about player welfare. Really? Then why are players playing more games than ever? Why are tournaments expanding? Why are injuries increasing? And now they want halftime interviews too? The hypocrisy is unbelievable.
Halftime is sacred. It belongs to the players and the coaches. Thatâs where games are won. Thatâs where tactics change. Thatâs where injuries get treated. Thatâs where leaders speak. It is not a media circus.
And donât tell me this is for the fans. Fans want better football, not a tired player giving a robotic 20-second answer because somebody sold another broadcast package.
VinĂcius understood that. He chose football over public relations.
The funniest part? They threaten him with a fine. A fine. As if that changes the principle. If I were there, Iâd pay it too. Because some things are worth more than money.
If FIFA really had their way, theyâd put microphones in the dressing room and call it innovation.
Football should come first. Not content. Not commercials. Not corporate greed.
For once, a player pushed back. And thatâs exactly why so many people are angry.â
Nel giorno del suo ottantesimo compleanno Trump ha chiuso lâaccordo con lâIran. La firma ufficiale arriva il 19 giugno in Svizzera, ma la sostanza Ăš giĂ tutta lĂŹ. Una resa. Una delle peggiori sconfitte militari americane dai tempi del Vietnam.
Ha attaccato il 28 febbraio, operazione Epic Fury. Ha bruciato decine di miliardi, si Ăš messo contro il Congresso.
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La situazione non Ăš solo tornata a prima della guerra. Ă peggiorata. Gli Stati Uniti tolgono il blocco navale, ritirano le forze dallâarea, sospendono le sanzioni sul petrolio iraniano, sbloccano venticinque miliardi di beni congelati e si impegnano a presentare piani di ricostruzione per lâIran da almeno trecento miliardi. Le riparazioni le paga chi una guerra la perde. Qui le paga chi lâha cominciata.
Il regime di Teheran ne esce piĂč forte e piĂč ricco. Fine delle sanzioni, petrolio che torna sul mercato, fondi liberati, soldi americani per ricostruire. Il governo iraniano incassa pure il consenso interno: ha retto lâurto e ha portato a casa tutto.
Il confronto con Obama Ăš impietoso. Nel 2015 chiuse un accordo nucleare senza sparare un colpo, senza un morto, senza umiliare nessuno. Ottenne dallâIran molto di piĂč, tetti veri allâarricchimento e ispezioni. Teheran accettĂČ. Questo fa un politico serio. Le cose le fai per bene, non le fai esplodere per poi firmare la pace dei vinti.
Lâunico che esce peggio di Trump da questa storia Ăš Putin. Lo stretto di Hormuz riapre, gli Emirati Arabi Uniti dal primo maggio sono fuori dallâOPEC, il cartello ha perso disciplina e forza per reggere i prezzi. Adesso ci si mette anche il petrolio iraniano che rientra sul mercato. Il greggio Ăš destinato a scendere in fretta. Lâultima entrata vera con cui Putin tiene in piedi lâeconomia russa sta per valere molto meno. Il punto di collasso si avvicina.
MEDIO ORIENTE | Pakistan: "Raggiunto l'accordo tra Usa e Iran, venerdĂŹ la firma in Svizzera". Entrambe le parti hanno dichiarato la cessazione immediata e permanente delle operazioni militari su tutti i fronti, inclusi quelli in Libano. #ANSA https://t.co/3UAn6gtzj3
Il capo negoziatore e presidente del parlamento iraniano Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf ha affermato che l'attacco israeliano ai sobborghi meridionali di Beirut "ha dimostrato ancora una volta che gli Stati Uniti non sono disposti o in grado di rispettare i propri impegni", accusando Washington di aver dato a Israele il "via libera" e avvertendo che cosĂŹ "non Ăš possibile proseguire"
First time ever at a World Cup: FIFA forcing 3-min âhydration breaksâ in EVERY match, even in air-conditioned stadiums. Officially for player welfare, but we all know itâs ad slots for broadcasters. Turning football into quarters with built-in commercials. Momentum killer. Not a coincidence it happens in the USA.
HORRIFIC: Israeli settler terrorists carried out a pogrom in the village of Deir Dibwan in the West Bank.
The pogrom was carried out by approximately 50-60 masked and armed settlers. They set houses, vehicles, and fields on fire. They poured gasoline on an elderly man and tried to burn him alive.
When a refâs standing waiting for a TV producer to tell him when he's allowed to restart a game, you've stopped running a football tournament & started running an ad break with football in between.
Sad thing is, the Premier League is watching & learningđ€Šââïž
FIFA's World Cup 'hydration breaks' are a money-grabbing disgrace: Gianni Infantino is selling football's soul to broadcasters - and fans are paying the price, writes RIATH AL-SAMARRAI https://t.co/9J6MmXngMh
đšđŁïžNew: Thierry Henry reacts to the Brazil, Morocco, and Netherlands press conferences, where questions in Spanish were reportedly not permitted for Hakimi, VinĂcius Jr., and Frenkie de Jong:
âI have covered World Cups for years, and this situation makes absolutely no sense to me. Youâre telling me a World Cup co-hosted by Mexico can stop journalists from asking questions in Spanish? Thatâs like hosting a Formula 1 race and banning cars from using their engines.
We saw it with Hakimi. We saw it with VinĂcius. Now weâre hearing similar stories involving Frenkie de Jong. The players understood the questions. The journalists spoke one of the most widely spoken languages on the planet. Yet somehow the language became the problem.
Gianni Infantino talks about inclusion, diversity, and bringing football to everyone. Fine. Then explain this contradiction. How can FIFA celebrate diversity in every promotional video and then create headlines because Spanish journalists are being told to switch languages at a tournament hosted by Mexico?
Spanish isnât some obscure dialect spoken by a handful of people. Itâs the language of hundreds of millions across the Americas and beyond. If a journalist from Mexico, Spain, Argentina, Colombia, or anywhere else asks a question in Spanish and the player understands it, why is football creating barriers where none existed?
The irony is unbelievable. FIFA keeps telling us football belongs to everyone, but this controversy has many fans asking whether some voices are more welcome than others.
Maybe thereâs a logistical explanation. Maybe itâs a translation issue. But perception matters. And right now the perception is terrible.
Because what fans are seeing is simple: a World Cup hosted partly by a Spanish-speaking nation, players who understand Spanish, journalists who speak Spanish, and officials telling them not to use Spanish.
If thatâs progress, somebody needs to explain it better. Because from the outside, it looks like footballâs governing body is tripping over its own message.â
âFIFA wanted a celebration of diversity. Instead, theyâve handed the internet a controversy that wonât stop being discussed.â
This is what Elon Musk doesn't want you to see on this platform. Thisâs what your media wonât report.
Lebanon is being ethnically cleansed in real time.