Peter Kelava
1.2K posts

Peter Kelava
@PeterKelava
Books. Dogs. Coffee. Music.
Katılım Ağustos 2025
1.5K Takip Edilen97 Takipçiler

@ImJulianAssange @samtripoli Ahh the real story is more like Trudeau banked on the arrogance of his protesters to make an ass out themselves and he got away with it because they did!
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Trudeau Government Used Faked Intelligence To Illegally Frame Protesting Truckers As Violent Extremists
public.news/p/trudeau-gove…
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Peter Kelava retweetledi
Peter Kelava retweetledi
Peter Kelava retweetledi

If FIFA's most controversial rulings come down to "trust me," no one should. Digital precision and objectivity are great, but only if used transparently and consistently. Otherwise it’s just more tools for the wizard behind the curtain. My op-ed, ICYMI: wapo.st/4eVPF52
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Peter Kelava retweetledi

I was at both of these matches.
We watched the ball gently brush the hair of a Croatian soccer player but never change trajectory. FIFA told us the ball data said otherwise.
We watched again yesterday as the ball hit a cable and came straight down to the English player's feet. FIFA tells us it never touched the cable.
FIFA's created a Ministry of Truth that's breeding distrust among football fans as we're told not to believe what we've seen from every angle with our own eyes.

Lila@LilaL_Hrv
Where’s the ball sensor FIFA?? You picked up a Croatian player’s hair but not a wire cable?!! 🙄🙄🙄🙄
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Peter Kelava retweetledi
Peter Kelava retweetledi

On this day in 1944, Theodore Roosevelt Jr. died in his sleep in a stone farmhouse in Normandy. He was 56 years old, and he had spent almost his entire adult life trying to be worthy of a famous last name.
He was the eldest son of President Theodore Roosevelt. In the First World War he went to France and was gassed and badly wounded at Soissons leading his men. That same summer his younger brother Quentin, a pilot, was shot down and killed over France. Ted came home with lungs and a leg that never fully recovered, and before he even left Europe he helped found the American Legion so that ordinary soldiers would have someone looking out for them.
Between the wars he did almost everything. Governor of Puerto Rico. Governor General of the Philippines. Businessman, explorer, writer. He could have spent the Second World War safe behind a desk. Instead, at 54, arthritic and walking with a cane, he talked his way back into uniform and into combat.
By 1943 he was fighting in North Africa and Sicily under Terry Allen, and their loose, unpolished, soldier-first style rubbed General Patton the wrong way. Patton had them both relieved of command. Roosevelt didn't sulk. He asked for another job, any job, as long as it kept him near the fighting. They made him assistant commander of the 4th Infantry Division.
Then came D-Day. He hid a heart condition from the Army doctors. He wrote to his commander three separate times, in writing, begging to go in with the very first wave rather than watch from a ship. He was the only general to land in the first wave on any beach that morning, the oldest man in the invasion, walking through machine gun fire with a cane in one hand and a pistol in the other.
The boats came in a mile off course. Officers froze. Roosevelt limped up and down the beach under fire, studied the ground, and said, "We'll start the war from right here." Then he spent the morning waving men forward and sorting out the chaos so calmly that terrified 20 year olds looked at this old man with a cane and decided that if he wasn't scared, they wouldn't be either.
His son Quentin, named for the uncle killed in the last war, landed at Omaha Beach the same morning. They were the only father and son to come ashore together on D-Day.
He died a month later. A heart attack in his sleep. And here is the part that gets me. On the very day he died, the orders had just come through promoting him to major general and giving him his own division. He never saw the paperwork. He never knew he'd earned the Medal of Honor either.
At his funeral his pallbearers were seven of the most famous generals of the war, Bradley, Hodges, Collins, Barton, Huebner, and George Patton. The same Patton who had fired him. Patton wrote in his diary that Roosevelt was one of the bravest men he had ever known.
Years later Omar Bradley was asked to name the single most heroic thing he witnessed in all of World War II. He didn't pause. He said, "Ted Roosevelt on Utah Beach."

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Peter Kelava retweetledi
Peter Kelava retweetledi

@upsdwnwrld Use that football IQ and qualified Croatia to the next round 😂🤪🤣
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Peter Kelava retweetledi

@ESPNFC All of a sudden
The sensors in the ball no longer works ?
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Peter Kelava retweetledi
Peter Kelava retweetledi

@RPMComo Always against the smaller nations. Always and forever. Fifa mafia.
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@WehliyeMohamed @FIFAWorldCup Crazy that this even needs to be said
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There are 8 countries left in this year's @FIFAWorldCup. No referee should come from any of these 8 countries.
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@FabrizioRomano One lucky 2018 run carried this man for almost a decade. Reality finally caught up
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Peter Kelava retweetledi

Thank you for 23 days of the best moments we could have shared together 🤩🇪🇬
#egyptnt
#FIFAWORLDCUP

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