🚨🗣️New: Luis Suárez reacts to Uruguay’s arrival in the United States for the World Cup, where the squad faced sniffer dogs and rigorous security checks:
“I’ve been in football a long time, and I’ve seen tournaments all over the world. But what we’re witnessing here with the USA hosting this World Cup is deeply concerning. Take the Uruguay team arriving — world-class players like Manuel Ugarte, standing there with arms folded, looking utterly bewildered as sniffer dogs go through their bags like they’re common criminals. That image says it all. These are ambassadors of the game, not suspects at the border.
This isn’t hospitality; it’s humiliation dressed up as security. You’ve got a Somali referee, one of Africa’s best, denied entry despite a valid visa — a man who dreamed of officiating at the pinnacle of his career, turned away at the airport. African and South American delegations facing extra screenings, visa chaos for fans and officials from qualified nations. This is the ‘land of the free’ rolling out the red carpet? It feels more like a fortress with razor wire.
The beautiful game deserves better than being turned into a political football or a paranoid checkpoint. FIFA chased the dollars — and there are billions to be made, no doubt — but they’ve sold the soul of the tournament to a host that treats global football stars and supporters like potential threats. Meanwhile, American taxpayers and host cities are left holding a bill running into hundreds of millions for security and logistics that FIFA largely pockets.
Football has always been about unity, passion, and bringing people together across borders. Right now, under this hosting, it’s being strangled by suspicion and overreach. The world is watching these scenes and cringing. If this continues, it risks leaving a bitter taste that lingers far longer than any on-pitch glory. We needed a celebration of the game — not a showcase of division. Something has to change.”
Siempre las teorías conspiranoicas nacen de un sentimiento muy humano de pensar que las cosas tienen un por que o una razon.
Por que a la gente le da miedo admitir que los accidentes pasan la gente muere y sufre todos los días por que así es la vida.
@BelaundeRafael Rafael, todos los días extorsionan y matan (entre otras cosas) al peruano de pie. Que acabe con eso y ahí recien se podrá decir que el país se salvó.
Porque acá no se deberían celebrar los "logros hipotéticos".
@ArkyUpdates Can’t wait till all these fucken morons realize they can’t make it as a streamer. Hopefully ya’ll get an education get degrees stack em. Invest in yourself properly
Also I think people have trouble distinguishing between feeling uncomfortable and feeling violated so they treat every minor inconvenience as an infringement of their rights
Me dirán mala persona, pero el día en que la desgracia le toque a Dalas Review, me alegraré. Y no me importa decirlo públicamente, me alegraré sabiendo que el mundo se libró de una escoria