David L.

103.4K posts

David L.

David L.

@davelag

California, USA 가입일 Mayıs 2010
791 팔로잉1.5K 팔로워
David L. 리트윗함
David L. 리트윗함
Rameses Niblick III
Rameses Niblick III@TheLittleWaster·
All these Yanks seem to be missing one main point, it's just totally wrong on every level for the American president to insert himself and interfere in the business of FIFA during a world cup. And if you can't see that, you really are a simpleton.
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Isaiah Martin
Isaiah Martin@isaiahrmartin·
I DEMAND ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT AGAINST DONALD TRUMP FOR CURSING THE MEN’S SOCCER TEAM AND ENDING OUR WORLD CUP! THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER!!!!!!!!
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Spencer Hakimian
Spencer Hakimian@SpencerHakimian·
JUST IN: Trump says Belgium is 2 weeks away from developing a nuclear bomb.
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Ron Filipkowski
Ron Filipkowski@RonFilipkowski·
If you are part of a sports team that is in contention for a major title, you probably don’t want to have Trump get involved in any way.
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Suzie rizzio
Suzie rizzio@Suzierizzo1·
Now that was the perfect reply to stupid post!
Suzie rizzio tweet media
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Prem Thakker
Prem Thakker@prem_thakker·
Goes to one Knicks game and they lose for the literal first time in 2 months. Calls the head of FIFA to make him overturn a red card and then the US loses in one of the worst matches of the tournament. No one does it like him, it’s actually amazing
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MeidasTouch
MeidasTouch@MeidasTouch·
THE TRUMP EFFECT: The USA just lost to Belgium in the World Cup Round of 16 by a score of 4-1, right after Trump personally called FIFA to clear star striker Balogun to play. Sports fans are calling it the Trump curse. He attended the Super Bowl and predicted a Chiefs win, but the Eagles blew them out. He was there when the Commanders hosted the Lions and lost at home. He watched from a suite as Miami fell in the College Football National Championship. He sat in the owner’s suite when the Knicks snapped their huge playoff streak in NBA Finals Game 3. And he attended the Ryder Cup where Europe topped the US team.
MeidasTouch tweet media
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Ron Filipkowski
Ron Filipkowski@RonFilipkowski·
Thanks Trump.
Ron Filipkowski tweet media
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😱 Scary Larry 😱 🇺🇦✊🏻🇺🇸🗽
The same MAGAs who said “sports should stay out of politics,” condemning Colin Kaepernick & telling LeBron James to “shut up and dribble,” have absolutely no problem with their child-raping cult leader directly interfering with an international sporting event. Fucking disgusting.
😱 Scary Larry 😱 🇺🇦✊🏻🇺🇸🗽 tweet media
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Craig Gallagher
Craig Gallagher@ProfKreg·
Pretty perfect summation of modern America, really. "Everyone would cheat if they could, therefore cheating is not bad." The ethical calculus of a toddler caught stealing from a cookie jar
Dylan MacKinnon@DylanFMackinnon

Listen, I think decided Balogun can play on the eve of the game is a bad look for FIFA too, but these fans from other countries can drop the fake indignation. Would the English fans be this upset if it was Harry Kane, French if it was Mbappe. Spare out the fake outrage please

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Megan Feringa
Megan Feringa@megan_feringa·
genuinely depressing the slew of fellow American journalists (+ colleagues) contorting themselves into shameless knots to insist that overt corruption is an act of profound patriotism bc it benefits them, if you can’t have shame at least have the dignity to not be so tone deaf
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Priyansh
Priyansh@Privaricate·
Every American here wants to say nice things about the team and its players before condemning Trump & FIFA. No, your team is very much a part of this corruption. The coaching staff & the players are eager to use the Trump-Infantino friendship for a successful World Cup campaign
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John Kirby
John Kirby@csljohnkirby·
No, I would not change my tune. If FIFA lifted the suspension on Jarell Quansah after his red card for England, I would be just as annoyed. This is not about Belgium, the USA, England, Europe, or any one player. It is about football integrity. A red card carries consequences. If those consequences can be lifted after political intervention, then the problem is no longer just one decision. It becomes a question of fairness, process and whether the rules apply equally to everyone. Football has value because people believe the contest is honest. Once that belief is damaged, the whole game is damaged.
Kevin Kinkead@Kevin_Kinkead

the annoying thing about Balogun situation is that every single complainer on here (99% Europeans) would change their tune if it happened to their guy. imagine that was Harry Kane getting sent off. do you think the insufferable British media would have simply accepted the red?

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Telegraph Football
Telegraph Football@TeleFootball·
Jürgen Klopp led a furious backlash against Fifa president Gianni Infantino, who now faces calls to resign after overturning Folarin Balogun’s World Cup suspension. “This is our sport, not theirs. If Donald Trump and Gianni Infantino really sorted this out between themselves, it is madness; it calls everything into question.” @ben_rumsby, @TelegraphDucker and @Tom_Morgs have more ⤵️ telegraph.co.uk/football/2026/…
Telegraph Football tweet media
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The Purple Pimpernel
The Purple Pimpernel@Eyeswideopen69·
“In America, things couldn't be more different. We simply can't accept a wrong left unrighted.” Bullshit! Your president is a convicted rapist, an insider trader, and very likely a paedophile who led a violent putsch against his own country. How wrong is that?
Ellen Carmichael@ellencarmichael

The most interesting part of the red card saga isn't the ruling. It's how differently Americans and Europeans process the idea that they might have been wronged. Europeans are fundamentally different from Americans in one particular way: they expect life to be aggravating and at times unfair. It's just a fact of moving through the world. I joke that in Europe, the customer is always wrong. You didn't read the fine print. The only pharmacy in town is closed every other Tuesday for three hours, and even if the times weren't posted, that's still your problem. Too bad if you want the bill, because the waiter's on his union-mandated half-hour smoke break, and you're just going to have to wait. To quote the great Mark Knopfler: sometimes you're the windshield, sometimes you're the bug. There's something freeing in that. Things are less in your control, so there's less angst in managing your expectations. In America, things couldn't be more different. We simply can't accept a wrong left unrighted. The flight attendant sneezed handing you a drink on your one-hour flight? 15,000 frequent flyer miles. Didn't like your appetizer? A replacement is on the way, and the whole course comes off the bill. There's a reason our interstates are lined with trial lawyer billboards. Europeans have turned complaining into a continental pastime with no expectation that the universe owes them a remedy for their grief. You gripe about the train being late, your friends nod solemnly and everyone goes back to their apéro. In America, we launch a full-blown investigation of the train system, sue the government (and its contractors) that allowed for the tardiness and hold a Congressional hearing on the state of national infrastructure. So to an objective observer, the red card shouldn't have happened, and VAR was a travesty. To Americans, our star player shouldn't be unfairly banned from a match we couldn't afford to lose for a card he so obviously didn't deserve. Who cares that FIFA used a little-used reversal to fix it. Who cares that other people are mad about it. We. Were. Wronged. It was unjust. It must be corrected. We would accept nothing less. Europeans waxing poetic about the sanctity of the game are, of course, talking about a governing body whose last tournament host was decided via confirmed cash bribes — one that imposed dress codes on women, shrugged off widespread allegations of modern slavery and reconfigured the entire tournament calendar to suit the host country. Which is exactly the point. If you've made peace with all of that, at least enough to watch the tournament four years later, a probationary suspension isn't actually a scandal. Maybe that's the real divide. Over millennia, Europeans have made peace with being the bug. Americans have never once considered it, and apparently, we're not about to start now.

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ettingermentum
ettingermentum@ettingermentum·
There’s nothing existential about anything now. The reputation of this team and program is unfixably fucked. If we win we look dirty, if we lose we look pathetic. That’s the problem with getting special treatment from political pressure. The only answer is sitting Balogun.
Matthew Zeitlin@MattZeitlin

The thing about Balogun playing is that we now existentially have to win a game that’s basically a toss-up

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Jack D 🏳️‍🌈🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
THIS is why everyone hates your country. Everyone else when there's a red card accepts the reality of it and moves on, you guys corrupt the sport and then expect to be congratulated for it. No wonder you elected trump, nation of narcissists.
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