

Still Danford
12.2K posts

@Adewale_us
I must speak and I must flow Not a politician but a tool for a working country. I'm not afraid to speak, so I let it out when I'm supposed to. A serial Rap ❤️er




how your gf looks at you when you ask her to block the guy who “raped” her in 2019:



FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup






FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup



FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup



FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup

FIFA updated its Stadium Code of Conduct on June 2, 2026. The new rule says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the stadium”. Reason... Safety. FIFA says bottles, cups, jars, cans are banned because they could cause injury if thrown. They also noted “outside bottles are already prohibited at several of these venues”. Previous rule... Just last month FIFA allowed “empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to 1 litre”. That clause was removed. FIFA says bottled water inside venues will be sold at prices “which remain consistent with other events held at each stadium”. At last summer’s Club World Cup, bottled water sold for $4-$6. Dasani, Coca-Cola’s brand, is expected to be the main water supplier. Fans are frustrated because 26 of 104 matches are expected in 26°C+ heat, 5 matches in 28°C+. Experts warned of health risks from extreme heat. FIFA says misting stations, hydration stations, cooling tents will be available around stadiums. Exceptions... Baby milk/sterilized water up to 1L per child, and medical liquids up to 500ml with a certificate are still allowed. So basically... no reusable bottles, pay for water inside, “consistent with other events” pricing. The timing, 1 week before kickoff on June 11, is why it’s getting called a “last-minute ban”. #ACCELERATE2026 #CFC #FIFAWorldCup