Micky
10.2K posts

Micky
@_The_Beardo
Single dad. 2 beautiful kids ❤ Manchester United

🇲🇱💰 BREAKING: Mali just shared $33 million in gold revenue with local communities. Not foreign corporations. Not European banks. Not Swiss accounts. Local communities. The people who live where the gold is mined. This is what the new mining code does. This is what sovereignty looks like. For decades, Mali's gold left. The people got nothing. Now, $33 million goes straight to them. Schools. Roads. Hospitals. Built with money that used to disappear. The West called it instability. Mali calls it justice. The miners are local. The revenue is local. The future is local. This is why the empire panics. This is why France screams. This is why the EU threatens. When Africans control African resources, everyone wins. Except the colonizers. Mali just proved it. $33 million. In their pockets. Not ours. The continent is watching. The lesson is spreading. The old order is dying. One gold bar at a time.

White Afrikaans 'refugees' returning to South Africa due to financial concerns, difficulty adapting to American culture and feeling culturally isolated despite integrating into workplaces and schools When U.S. President Donald Trump introduced a special refugee pathway for white South Africans in 2025, the policy sparked global attention. The program allowed Afrikaners—descendants of mainly Dutch settlers and Afrikaans-speaking South Africans—to enter the United States under claims of discrimination and violence at home. Several thousand Afrikaners took the opportunity to relocate to the United States due to a false narrative of a non existent genocide on white farmers in South Africa. South Africa’s government strongly rejected the claim that white citizens face systematic persecution. Officials argued that crime affects all South Africans regardless of race and that police statistics do not support the narrative of targeted anti-white violence. The U.S. initiative prioritized Afrikaners for refugee admission, dramatically reshaping the country’s refugee system and reducing the overall annual cap to just 7,500 people. The Trump administration justified the policy by citing alleged discrimination and violence against white farmers and landowners in South Africa. The first group of Afrikaner families arrived in the United States in May 2025, greeted with media attention and political debate. Yet, not long after arriving, some families have begun returning to South Africa, citing a range of personal and practical reasons for leaving the U.S. One of the most common reasons cited by returning Afrikaners is the high cost of living in the United States. Healthcare in particular can be a major adjustment. Unlike South Africa’s mix of public and private systems, medical treatment in the United States often requires expensive insurance or high out-of-pocket payments. For some Afrikaner families, the economic trade-off simply did not make sense in the long term. While American salaries are often higher, everyday expenses can be significantly greater than in South Africa. Housing, health insurance, childcare, and education can place heavy financial pressure on families. Many newcomers discover that even well-paying jobs can leave little disposable income once those costs are covered. bzzlifenews.com

🚨 Actor Cristo Fernández, who plays Dani Rojas in Ted Lasso, is on trial at Paso Locomotive, a 2nd tier club in the United States. 😳🎞️ He even made his debut and played 30 minutes in a friendly against New Mexico United. ‼️🇺🇸 FOOTBALL IS LIFE. 😍










