Binda is such a sad and pathetic woman, she's nobody but her husband's slave, and the girls should realize that her husbands cheating has made her the most bitter and insecure woman ever.
There's no amount of bleach or blonde extensions that can cure her black heart. #DesiBling
Keith Lee tells Keke Palmer how important respect in his marriage is, explaining that he’ll only have more kids if his wife wants to because she’s the one who carries them 👀
“I’m done when she’s done… If she want 30 of them, we gonna have 30 of them… I’m not the one carrying them, that’s not my body going through the before, after effects.”
Very disappointed! I’ve lived in Japan longer than I have lived in New Zealand !
My wife and kids are Japanese and I am a Japanese citizen but just not on the Rugby field !
Rugby is a sport for all people and brings communities together. This is not
Right 🥲 #keeprugbyclean
Japan's top tier professional rugby league has introduced new rules that treat naturalized Japanese citizens who didn't grow up in Japan like they are second class citizens.
To qualify as a "A1" Japanese player, a person has to have spent six of their nine years of compulsory education in Japan, or be born in Japan or have parents or grandparents born in Japan. Teams can field as many A1 players as they want.
Many of the naturalized players currently in Japan will be categorized "A2" Japanese players and face limits that will reduce their opportunities to play.
It is common in Japan for elite rugby high schools to recruit promising athletes from abroad, who then go on to play at university and professional levels. Others move to Japan as adults to play at the professional level. Up until now, if they met the requirements for Japanese citizenship and naturalized, they were treated the same as other Japanese players. The A2 category looks like it was created to target players like this and limit their participation in pro games.
Veteran players such as Lomano Lemeki, who moved to Japan at age 19 to play professional rugby, became Japanese citizens, and later played on Japan's national team, are speaking out against the new rules.