Fizeram um compilado de 4 minutos mostrando os lances em que a Argentina foi favorecida contra o Egito.
Simplesmente um escândalo mundial. Quanta sujeira envolvida. 🤢
There is no conclusive proof. But the circumstantial evidence that there is pro-Argentina bias in FIFA affecting the World Cup:
1) In the group stage opener against Algeria, Messi caught Aïssa Mandi with a studs-up challenge on the Achilles and escaped any card. FIFA later admitted the VAR officials got it wrong and sanctioned them.
2) The inconsistency became undeniable when the United States' Folarin Balogun was sent off in the Round of 32 for a near-identical foot-on-ankle challenge on Bosnia's Tarik Muharemović. Pundits directly compared the red card to Messi's uncarded foul on Mandi.
3) In the 2026 Round of 32 against Cape Verde, referee Drew Fischer did not enforce the tournament's new rule requiring an injured player to remain off the pitch after treatment. He waited for Argentina's Nicolás Tagliafico to return before allowing a Cape Verde corner. Several uncalled fouls in that game also went Argentina's way.
4) Today against Egypt, with Egypt leading 1-0, Mostafa Ziko finished off a long breakaway to make it 2-0. VAR sent Letexier to the monitor and the goal was disallowed for a Marwan Attia shirt-pull on Lisandro Martínez that occurred roughly 20 seconds earlier and nearly the full length of the pitch from goal.
5) Neutral officiating experts, not just Egyptian fans, called the decision wrong. Former FIFA referee Mark Clattenburg said he did not believe it was a foul and did not believe VAR should have intervened at all, adding that the call was inconsistent with the physical contact referees had allowed all tournament.
6) The winning sequence produced a second grievance. In the buildup to Enzo Fernández's stoppage-time winner, Egypt appealed for a penalty on a Salah challenge and for an Alexis Mac Allister shirt-pull, and VAR checked neither. Hassan cited the unreviewed Mac Allister pull directly in his post-match remarks.
7) The 2026 grievances land on top of a 2022 record In Qatar, Argentina were awarded five penalties, the most ever by a team in a single World Cup edition, with Messi taking all five. That same tournament, Messi handled the ball against the Netherlands in the quarterfinal and escaped a yellow card.
8) FIFA has appointed an all-Argentine crew, led by Facundo Tello, for Thursday's France–Morocco quarterfinal, the tournament's first all-same-country panel.
9) Comments attributed to Infantino after an Argentina match were widely discussed as suggesting bias toward Argentina before he later clarified them, and a deep Messi run drives far more global viewership and revenue than one without him. This establishes incentive.
FIFA cannot be trusted. Egypt was robbed. Argentina are coasting to another title under FIFA protection.
VAR didn't review two clear fouls inside the Argentinian box (against Egypt players) before Enzo Fernández's goal. Why? A foul on Martínez overturned Egypt's second goal. Why does the treatment have to be so one-sided? This is completely unfair. FIFA, be ashamed. Be genuinely ashamed. This is Robbery. Egypt have been robbed.
Former Mossad agent & Assad's General Halabi was sentenced today to 8 years in prison in Austria.
The former head of #Raqqa State Security was convicted of "torture, aggravated coercion, sexual coercion and multiple counts of grievous bodily harm".
As his sentence includes time spent in pre-trial detention, he's expected to serve 6.5 more years.
His co-defendant, the former commander of Raqqa Criminal Police, was also sentenced to 8 years.
https://t.co/HmV67Do1Pk
A sentence nobody expected to read in 2026:
#Syria will be *the* Middle East's largest fuel oil exporter in June.
And not because it produces the most oil.
Because Iraqi crude is trucked through Syrian territory to the Mediterranean, turning the country into a key export corridor.
The alternative route was launched in late March as a bypass to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Despite the Iran agreement, it's here to stay: the war has reshaped regional energy flows amid persistent geopolitical uncertainty in the Gulf.
https://t.co/GFIND0pe8R
Israeli Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli:
Türkiye of Erdoğan and Syria of al-Sharaa are now far more concerning than Iran.
The era of the Shiite empire of Iran is over.
The new axis is the Muslim Brotherhood axis of Türkiye, Syria, and Qatar.
Did you know?
The current governor of the Iraqi city of Babylon, Ali Turki, participated in the attack on the Syrian town of Darayya in the Damascus countryside in 2013 alongside militants of the Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq terrorist militia led by Qais al-Khazali.
The town of Darayya in the Damascus countryside witnessed horrific massacres against Syrian civilians at the end of January 2013 committed by the Assad regime and his allies, including Ali Turki.
In an interview released tonight, Sharaa ruled out any invasion of Lebanon, stating that Syria's vision for addressing the current crisis was conveyed to Trump.
The plan begins with ending the war as a first step, followed by strengthening Lebanon's official institutions and supporting negotiations with Hezbollah to develop economic, political and social solutions.
I never heard such brutal honesty about the state of Israel from an American official before. Those in the Biden administration would sooner sell their organs than say something like this publicly. In one soundbite he exposes Israel’s utter international isolation and its complete dependence on the US for its security. The masks and the gloves are off.
Israel got the war.
America got the bill.
The U.S. fired more than 200 THAAD interceptors defending Israel during Operation Epic Fury. That's roughly half of the Pentagon's entire inventory of that system. We also fired more than 100 SM-3 and SM-6 interceptors from Navy ships in the eastern Mediterranean.
Israel fired fewer than 100 Arrow interceptors and about 90 David's Sling interceptors.
One U.S. government official told the Washington Post that America fired roughly 120 more interceptors than Israel did and engaged twice as many Iranian missiles.
Each THAAD round costs $13 million. Lockheed Martin makes 96 of them a year. Replacements won't arrive until 2028 at the earliest.
Now here's the part that should make you stop.
Israel's defense budget is roughly $44 billion. That sounds like they're pulling their weight. What that number doesn't tell you is that the United States provided nearly $18 billion in military aid to Israel in a single fiscal year. Much of what Israel "spent" on this war was bought with American money, on American weapons systems, made by American defense contractors.
We funded their military. We burned through our missiles defending them. And now Congress is writing a $10.6 billion check to replace what the war consumed.
And while you were watching the war, Congress quietly passed Section 224 out of committee. It now goes to the full house. It would permanently merge U.S. and Israeli defense research, production, and procurement into a single structure, permanently, buried in the must-pass NDAA, shielded from the annual vote that currently gives Congress any leverage at all.
Israel got the war they lobbied for.
America got the bill.
And Congress is making sure we keep paying it forever.
That's not where I want my tax money going. How about you?
MEDİNE'DE BİN 400 YILLIK İHLAS SURESİ BULUNDU
Suudi Arabistan'ın Medine kentinde yürütülen arkeolojik kazılarda, bir kayanın üzerine kazınmış yaklaşık 1400 yıllık olduğu değerlendirilen İhlas Suresi bulundu.
Keşfi önemli kılan ise taş üzerindeki ayetlerin günümüzdeki Kur'an-ı Kerim'de yer alan İhlas Suresi ile büyük ölçüde örtüşmesi.
Erken İslam dönemine ait olduğu değerlendirilen bulgu, Kur'an'ın zamanla değiştirildiği yönündeki iddiaları boşa çıkarıyor.