There is a lot of “Paraguay isn’t very good” talk. Full stop.
Under Alfaro, they lost just once in WCQ and went 9 straight without defeat. They beat URG, Brazil, & Argentina.
They were one of the best defensive teams in the 🌎.
Paraguay isn’t bad.
#USMNT made them look bad.
On Monday, the Strait of Hormuz will reach 100 days of closure. Despite over 200 peace deals news made up by "journalists" and social media. Almost no oil is being transferred.
The whole 82-0 phenomenon reinforces that whole bit about how the only thing a bunch of dudes need in order to have a good time is to sit around announcing the names of a bunch of old athletes.
@KuKhahil There’s no fire whatsoever. Everyone on the team looks like it is good if they win or if they loose. Either way they all get paid.
Embarrassing
@SenatorAndyKim@atrupar We are paying higher gas prices for no reason. If this was an attack then ok. If this was regular market movement the. Ok. But Americans are just being forced to spend more for absolutely no reason each time we all pump each week. We will never get that money back.
@Fxhedgers Majority of companies passed on some kind of increase to the customer because of the Tarrifs. Companies will now get a refund but customer gets stiffed like usual.
@ReporterOriana@hjessy_ This will be great more non Politics people will learn how little they actually work and how convoluted the rules to everything is.
This is BS and incredibly soft.
One of the few critical voices in or around Inter Miami from the very beginning, even before Messi. Before it became popular to cover that team.
Feels like censorship.
There's a lot of confusion out there, including with Trump, that the US has lots of oil to sell to the world.
We do not. We're a net importer of crude (~+3 Mb/d). The EIA reports that fact in great detail every week.
The confusion stems from using the term "petroleum exports" which includes the bodacious amounts of natural gas liquids (NGL) that come from our wet gas plays. That stuff isn't "oil" and it is exported because it's wildly overproduced compared to our needs.
Yes, the US is a net exporter of "petroleum," but it's also a net IMPORTER of crude oil. In other words, the US has none to sell.
There's more complexity to why we export 3M b/d of crude (it's the wrong kind for our refineries) and also import 6.4 M b/d of crude (which is the right kind).