I’m crying this is a 27 min documentary in 4K highlighting all of Argentina’s robberies this World Cup 😭😭😭😭
But I was told that it was just a conspiracy theory
For YEARS people in the US soccer media killed me for saying this. Now their mainstream is saying it. One paid a terrible price for speaking the truth, but the truth is finally out.
IS THIS THE MOST RIGGED WORLD CUP IN HISTORY?
While Messi was losing 2‑0 to Egypt, tickets for Argentina's next match crashed from $1,800 to $1,000 when Egypt led, then shot past $2,000 within 30 minutes of Messi completing the comeback.
The market priced Messi's survival in real time.
Now look at the pattern. Ronaldo elbowed a player. Three‑match ban under FIFA rules. FIFA found a loophole, Article 27, and reduced it to one game. Armenia and Burundi got full bans for similar offenses.
Messi caught a player with his studs. Analysts called it a clear red card. He wasn't booked. Argentina's Otamendi carried a ban. FIFA quietly changed a regulation and the ban disappeared.
USA's Balogun got a red card. Trump called Infantino. FIFA used the same loophole to erase his ban.
One loophole. Used three times. Always for superstars or hosts. Never for small nations.
Now the money. FIFA expects $11 billion from this tournament. Fox paid half a billion for US TV rights. Every dollar depends on stars staying in.
USA and Portugal got knocked out. Within 24 hours, quarter‑final tickets dropped 60%.
Is protecting the stars smart business or corruption with better lawyers?
Bookmark and save this video as it exposes the truth.
Full breakdown 👇
American soccer clubs don't even have the World Cup on their radar, their goal is to win U13 tournaments across state lines and bleed your wallet dry in the process
The U.S. soccer federation is a poor return on invested capital.
I played soccer for 20+ years.
Grassroots.
Academy.
D1 college.
Pursued professionally after.
And I’ll say the quiet part out loud:
The US soccer infrastructure is broken.
In America, we treat playing D1 soccer like it is the peak achievement.
For most families, clubs, coaches, and players, the entire youth soccer machine is built around one goal:
Get recruited.
Get a scholarship.
Play college soccer.
But if the objective is to produce world-class players, D1 soccer is a terrible development path.
From 18-22, some of the most important technical development years of your career, you are preparing for a 3-4 month season built largely around athleticism, direct play, set pieces, fitness, and survival.
Now compare that to an 18-year-old in Spain, Argentina, Morocco, Italy, England, or France.
That player has likely been in a professional environment for years.
Training daily.
Playing meaningful matches year-round.
Competing against grown professionals.
Getting thousands more touches.
Learning how to solve the game under pressure.
The gap is massive.
And it shows.
American players are usually athletic.
They are usually fit.
They usually compete hard.
But at the highest levels, that is not enough.
The biggest difference is technical comfort.
We do not move the ball like Spain.
We do not combine like Argentina.
We do not play with the same fluidity, rhythm, and confidence you see from countries where the game is embedded into the culture from childhood.
That comes down to volume.
Volume of touches.
Volume of street soccer.
Volume of futsal.
Volume of unstructured play.
Volume of high-level training environments.
Volume of meaningful games.
In the US, youth soccer is expensive, overly organized, overly coached, tournament-driven, and too often built around winning games at 13 instead of developing players for 23.
Parents spend thousands.
Clubs charge thousands.
Travel teams fly all over the country.
Showcases become the product.
Recruiting becomes the scoreboard.
But the return on invested capital is poor.
We probably spend more money on youth soccer than almost any country in the world, yet the technical output does not match the investment.
That is a broken operating model.
And like any business, if the output is weak, you do not blame the customer.
You inspect the system.
The US has talent.
The US has athletes.
The US has money.
The US has facilities.
But the foundation is wrong.
We built a pay-to-play, college-recruiting machine and confused it for a world-class player development system.
Those are not the same thing.
Until we fix the grassroots layer, increase meaningful touches, make development less dependent on family income, and stop treating college soccer as the top of the mountain, the US will keep underperforming relative to its resources.
I’m not saying this to trash US Soccer.
I’m saying it because I lived it.
And if we actually want to become a powerhouse, we have to be honest about the infrastructure first.
Erling Haaland is taking the world by storm.
He drinks raw milk and eats beef liver and heart.
He doesn’t fear the sun. He gets sunlight in the morning and limits blue light at night.
In this video, I’m reviewing his diet…
Andrew Huberman’s no-BS fat loss protocol that actually works for real people:
Meat, fish, eggs, fruit, and vegetables. That’s it.
No bread, pasta, rice, tortillas, or processed junk. Water, coffee, or tea only.
People drop 4.5 kg (10 lbs) in the first week, stay full thanks to protein, and keep the results because it’s sustainable.
Add walking, then some resistance training, energy, sleep, mood, and libido all skyrocket.
Simple real food. No complicated rules.
What’s one simple eating change that’s helped you lose fat or feel way better?
I Asked Candace What the Single Most Disturbing Thing She Believes Is Real
“Everyone knew what Epstein was doing, and then he was protected. They knew that he went to prison. I think about this all the time. It’s a system, and that’s not imagined. If the Epstein thing didn’t wake you up to the fact that it’s left and right, you’re still asleep.”
@RealCandaceO
🗣️ Interviewer: “Argentina has been involved in several controversial refereeing decisions during this World Cup. Do you think it’s just a coincidence, or do you believe something suspicious is going on?”
Zlatan Ibrahimović: “After watching the game against Cape Verde, I can no longer believe it’s just a coincidence. The referee seemed to give 9 out of 10 key decisions in Argentina’s favor. There were several fouls on Cape Verde players that he ignored. He allowed Messi to take a quick free kick before the defensive wall had been properly set, and Messi wasn’t cautioned. The amount of added time also seemed to go well beyond what was expected.
When you look at all of this, it makes you question whether Argentina is being treated differently from other countries. If you have to win the World Cup amid controversy every time, then there’s nothing to brag about because it feels as though the tournament was made easier for you it wasn’t earned, but bought.”
🚨#BREAKING: A German soccer fan who flew to the USA but was fearful about coming because of news about criminals and people being mean...
...breaks down into TEARS, live on air saying he has FALLEN IN LOVE with America after a random man named "Bob" in Boston gave him a ride home after he was stuck at a game with no way back to his hotel
The German soccer fan's name is Sebastian, he said after meeting Bob, he extended his entire trip.
He said leaving America will hurt worse than watching Germany get knocked out of the World Cup.
"I fall in love with America. I'm sorry, it's just so emotional. Americans are not rude... if we are together, we can achieve great things."
THIS IS THE AMERICA I KNOW!!!!!! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸