A picture tells a thousand words:

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Sport and the regime:
“Do the players see themselves on a plantation? I think they do, in that all of the owners are white. That creates the dynamic: The owners are white, the coaches work for the white owners, and the industry is run by white commissioners. Anyone who exercises power over them is white, and they feel or believe that the owners are taking more value out of them than what the owners are putting in.”
Quote from book ‘Forty million dollar slaves’ by William C. Rhodes

Trump, FIFA, World Cup:
Trump’s FIFA phone call backfires? President defends Balogun drama | WATCH
President Donald Trump is defending his controversial phone call to FIFA President Gianni Infantino after the governing body overturned Folarin Balogun’s World Cup suspension. The decision sparked outrage, with Belgium reportedly filing a last-minute appeal and fans accusing Trump of interfering in the tournament. Here’s everything Trump said, why FIFA reversed the red card, and why the World Cup controversy is exploding online.
Note: Peter Thiel calls Greta Thunberg the anti Christ.
Peter Thiel warns the Antichrist and apocalypse are linked to the ‘end of modernity’ currently happening—and cites Greta Thunberg as a driving example
By Nick LichtenbergBusiness EditorFebruary 4, 2026, 3:12 PM ET
https://fortune.com/2026/02/04/peter-thiel-antichrist-greta-thunberg-end-of-modernity-billionaires/
Remember:
Haitian Revolution, series of conflicts between 1791 and 1804 between Haitian slaves, colonists, the armies of the British and French colonizers, and a number of other parties. Through the struggle, the Haitian people ultimately won independence from France and thereby became the first country to be founded by former slaves.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Haitian-Revolution
Punishment by US current regime:
The TPS clock Haitian and Syrian families are watching — and why Venezuela may be next
Story by LatinTimes Staff Reporter
• 12h
A tailor on Nostrand Avenue in Brooklyn’s Little Haiti — a stretch of Kreyòl signage and Konpa music serving a Haitian community estimated at 185,000 in New York alone — has spent decades building his trade beside neighbors who arrived the same way he did. His name is Chilly Bonny. More than a thousand miles south in Miramar, Florida, Farah Larrieux has run a communications firm serving Haitian and Caribbean businesses since 2005. Both hold Temporary Protected Status. Both are now watching the same clock.
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