🚨🇧🇷 Ronaldo Nazário on the difference between prime Brazil and today's Brazil:
"Today's players are like crying babies. In our time, football was pure passion. We weren't focused on fashion, social media, or building a personal brand. Our lives revolved around football. We trained hard, played through pain, and gave everything for the badge, our teammates, and the fans."
"We didn't step onto the pitch thinking about followers or sponsorships. We thought about winning, making Brazil proud, and leaving everything on the field. Football came first, and everything else was secondary."
"In our era, every nation feared Brazil. Opponents were beaten before the match even started because they knew they were facing Ronaldo, Rivaldo, Ronaldinho, Cafu, Roberto Carlos and so many world-class players. Today, that fear factor is gone."
"That hunger, sacrifice, and obsession with the game is what made our generation special. We lived football every single day."
@ShettimaDogo One of the major reason many African nations are backward is RELIGION! Even the colonial masters are still shocked how Africans have mentally and f0000lishly embraced one of their tool of oppression so willingly albeit so madly!
@okindoAugustine When a woman confess to you about another man,it means she has already calculated your worth and found out your dignity is low and you'll take any shit she throws at your face..women don't tell about other men in their lives to worthy men,you're just shit to her
The African diaspora needs to stop treating this as just another online debate.
If South Africa wants to normalise the mistreatment, humiliation and scapegoating of other Africans, then Africans outside South Africa should respond economically and culturally.
Stop watching South African films and shows. Stop buying South African wine. Stop buying South African products. Stop promoting South African tourism. Stop rewarding a country that treats vulnerable Africans as disposable while still expecting African solidarity, African markets and African cultural support.
This is not hatred of ordinary South Africans. It is a refusal to support a system and a social climate that dehumanises other Africans while calling it patriotism.
If African lives matter, then African money, attention and cultural support should also matter.
At this point, it is a moral obligation! I for one, I am done!