@DAZN_ES decíais en la transmisión que el Alemania Austria del 82 se jugó en San Mamés y que empataron. Fue en El Molinón y pactaron el 1-0 para Alemania Federal que clasificaba a ambos.
@miguelbustosnet@DAlvarez1976@oscar_puente_ Estaba cortado entre Lleida y Barcelona, pero no iban los trenes entre Lleida y Madrid porque patatas. En las horas en que estuvo sin servicio supongo que era impensable traer algún convoy desde Madrid para llevar a la gente que tenía que ir a Zaragoza o a la capital...
I had to read this three times before I could believe it was real.
Rotherham. A small town in northern England.
For sixteen years, at least 1,400 children — some as young as eleven — were raped, gang-raped, and trafficked between cities by organized groups of men.
Eleven years old.
Petrol was poured on them so they would stay quiet.
Their families were threatened with death.
Photos were taken and used as blackmail.
The police knew.
The council knew.
The social workers knew.
For sixteen years, not one of them moved.
Why?
Because officers were afraid of being called racist if they acted on what they were seeing.
That was the whole reason.
While children were being sold, adults were protecting their own reputations.
That is the moment something in you breaks.
And here is the part that makes it worse.
The TV networks did not report it. The papers did not chase it.
When the journalist Andrew Norfolk finally broke the story, even he thought maybe 150 girls had been hurt.
The real number was 1,400.
He was staggered.
This should have been the biggest story of the decade. It was not.
The networks looked away. The advertisers preferred safer topics.
The cover-up did not end when the report was published — it continued in the silence of every newsroom that refused to chase it.
Then Elon Musk bought X.
The advertisers fled.
The press declared the platform finished.
X almost did not survive.
But it did.
And on X, the names of those towns started trending.
Rotherham.
Telford.
Rochdale.
Oldham.
Towns the country had been told to forget.
Britain understands itself differently today.
Not because the politicians confessed.
Not because the broadcasters apologized.
Because one platform refused to let it stay buried.
X almost did not survive.
1,400 children almost stayed forgotten.
That is worth saying out loud.
@mossos En otros tiempos a estos parásitos se les llevaba a varios km de la ciudad, se les recordaba "amablemente" que estaba feo lo que hacía y no solían volver a aperecer por la zona. Así como dato inocente.
After 37 years, veteran game programmer Colin Porch has completed and released a sequel to the classic 1987 game Head Over Heels.
The project started in 1989 but was shelved when the gaming industry shifted from home computers to consoles.
The new game, titled Return to Blacktooth, continues the legacy of the original cult classic, famous for its unique isometric design. Porch had worked on popular versions of the original and kept the sequel idea alive for decades.
The project revived after Porch reunited with former colleagues from Ocean Software. Inspired by the resurgence of retro gaming, he completed the unfinished game as a passion project.
Published by Thalamus Digital, it has launched for the Commodore Amiga and Atari ST. It features hundreds of rooms across multiple worlds while staying true to the original's style and gameplay.