[RESETT] The owner of the Romanian football club Steaua Bucharest has sensationally announced that the club will ban all players who have taken the coronary vaccine.
Gigi Becali - a Romanian businessman and politician - said he no longer allows vaccinated players to play because they "do not have the energy", writes the Daily Mail.
Becali claims that people who have been vaccinated against the coronavirus die in hospital, in contrast to those who do not want to take the coronary injection.
He also claimed that players at Romanian rivals CFR Cluj and Rapid Bucharest are struggling after the players have been vaccinated.
- You'll laugh, but I may be right. The vaccinated lose their strength. It is scientific, he said according to the Romanian journalist Emanuel Rosu, writes Daily Mail.
FC Steaua Bucharest owner Gigi Becali says he is BANNING Covid19 vaccinated from playing in his team as he says they are now 'powerless' and 'those vaccinated lose their strength. That’s something scientific.' pic.twitter.com/vK3c8dphC2
he also has a clinic that provided free ivermectin for basically anyone that asked for it.
Becali also recently said that Steaua Bucharest striker Claudiu Keseru - who returned to the club in August after six years in the Bulgarian team Ludogorets - can no longer play at a high level because he was vaccinated.
In Romania, only 40 percent of the population has taken the coronary vaccine.
The authorities in the country have stated via a post on Facebook where they write that football players who are corona vaccinated do not lose energy or strength, in response to a statement to Becali.
[Townhall] Mike Rowe Scholarship Highlights the Lost Virtues of Hard Work and Sweat
Several months into her education, Wilson found out about the Work Ethic Scholarship Program from the Mike Rowe WORKS Foundation. The program provides financial support to students enrolled in trade school training programs who have demonstrated a continuing commitment to personal responsibility, a positive attitude, and a strong work ethic.
"I was like, 'Hey, I am a huge 'Dirty Jobs' fan,'" she said of Rowe's wildly popular Discovery Channel show, in which he does every trade job created that makes the clocks, trains, planes, and automobiles run on time and keeps your toilet flushing, too. Rowe made a reality show out of unglamorous yet essential jobs that make everyone's lives safer and more comfortable. He brought to the forefront not just their existence but also the value these jobs have for the people who do them.
For generations, high schools have geared young people to apply to universities and colleges. They have largely ignored and dismissed trades as either beneath them or not part of achieving the American dream.
As a result, many young people obtained expensive degrees that have few job prospects, and their debt lasts them well into their 40s. This has also created a culture that has lost its connection with the value and appreciation of skilled labor and the joy of getting your hands dirty.
"But everywhere I went on 'Dirty Jobs,' I saw 'Help Wanted' signs. It slowly dawned on me that high unemployment did not necessarily stem from a lack of opportunity. I remember being surprised to learn that 2.3 million jobs were open when the unemployment rate surpassed 10%."
When a financial reporter at the Wall Street Journal asked his take on how such a skills gap could exist during times of high unemployment, Rowe shared his theory.
"Much of society had waged a war on work," he said. "And I talked at length about the stigmas and stereotypes that surrounded many of the jobs we featured on the show, along with the myths and misperceptions that keep so many people from exploring a career in the trades."
On Feb. 23, Rowe's scholarship application process opens for 2022. Across the country, there are thousands of Tracy Wilsons out there attending community colleges, trade schools, and apprenticeship programs, eager to show their value, even when so many do not acknowledge it. Wilson encourages anyone who is even remotely considering applying to do it.
"Not just for the money -- which was nice by the way -- but because you also get to experience expressing and understanding the importance of work," she says. "It is a virtue we don't value enough in society, but we can change that one job at a time." I worked with engineers for 30 years, then with construction dudes for 15. Good folks.
Posted by: Bobby ||
02/24/2022 00:00 ||
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Link ||
[11124 views]
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#1
First job at 11 shoveling out the neighbor's pony stalls. Then car wash, steel mill, pizza delivery and aerospace/defense. Now at 70 Ah'm back to shoveling stalls.
#2
Part of the consequences of allowing the education establishment convert post elementary school education into a feeder system for colleges. Back in the 60s a lot of schools had skill programs, aka 'shop'.
#4
The administrator class decided that shop class was "a lawsuit waiting to happen" also... Besides if you don't go to college you will be 'stuck in Iraq'.
IMO Kazakhstan. Look at a map - adjoins the most targeted part of Ukraine. Resource rich. Home of Russia's spaceport. Not subject of any NATO or similar treaties. At risk of Chinese co-option (Uighurs are essentially eastern Kazakhs.)
Combine that with our exodus from A'stan. Add in the meetings today between Russia and Pakistan.
[FOX] The New York Times' chief White House correspondent said Wednesday on MSNBC it was "a good question" of why Russian President Vladimir Putin engaged in the military operation in Ukraine under the Biden administration, and not under Trump.
Former President Trump said Tuesday that Putin's aggressive actions in Ukraine would never have happened while he was president.
"I know [Putin] very well. Very, very well [and] ... this never would have happened ... had I been in office, not even thinkable," Trump said.
New York Times reporter Peter Baker said, "[Trump] said yesterday ’this wouldn’t have happened when I was president,’ or somehow he was too tough ... It is a good question whether President Trump was volatile enough that President Putin didn’t know how he would react to, you know, something more aggressive in Ukraine."
#1
Don't forget, that under Trump we were a energy exporter and not buying Russian oil. We set the price of a barrel, not the outside world. That's called having them by the balls.
#8
I do wonder if all of the Trump is a crazy warmonger nonsense from the left gave Putin the idea that maybe there is something he doesn't understand/know about Trump.
[Yahoo News] Referring to the Russia-Ukraine Crisis, Trump praised Putin as a “genius” and stated that “China is going to be next” under Biden’s watch.
In a recent interview with the conservative talk radio program “The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show,” former U.S. President Donald Trump confidently stated that “China is going to be next” and would “absolutely” be going after Taiwan.
He accused the Biden administration of being weak and assured the hosts that an invasion would “never have happened” under his own presidency. Trump also praised Putin as a “genius” for sending Russian troops into Ukraine under the guise of “peace keepers.” He stated, “Here’s a guy who’s very savvy.”
The hosts mocked President Joe Biden’s tweets from two years ago in which he wrote: “I’m the only person in this field who’s ever gone toe-to-toe with [Putin].” They claimed Russian invasions also took place under the Obama administration, suggesting the two leaders had weak positions on foreign policy.
Not much really.
I doubt there is anything that could have been done(reasonably) to stop Putin from invading Ukraine. The countries share borders and Putin has a well funded modern military. The west could make it hurt more but not prevent the invasion.
Because, as Biden said in 'his' speech, we are controlling fuel cost support for our allies by issuing them our strategic reserves. Giving them the $25/bbl oil and buying the $99/bbl oil from Russia.
#13
Carter nullified the 'Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty' to appease Communist China, so there is no defense pact in place for the US and Taiwan. See 'Goldwater v. Carter'.
Carter's 'Taiwan Relations Act' removed defense from the equation, so the US has no legal standing
Posted by: Mullah Richard ||
02/24/2022 18:44 Comments ||
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#14
Bringing enough troops over to Taiwan to occupy would be a bigger feet than Normandy invasions. China would have to level Tiawan to be successful and three gorges dam is still a highly vulnerable target that Taiwan would hit before they went down.
Google Sync! [BBC] New data from a scientific "accident" has suggested that life may actually flash before our eyes as we die.
A team of scientists set out to measure the brainwaves of an 87-year-old patient who had developed epilepsy. But during the neurological recording, he suffered a fatal heart attack - offering an unexpected recording of a dying brain. Must.not.post.Joe.Biden.references...
It revealed that in the 30 seconds before and after, the man's brainwaves followed the same patterns as dreaming or recalling memories.
Brain activity of this sort could suggest that a final "recall of life" may occur in a person's last moments, the team wrote in their study, published in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience on Tuesday.
Dr Ajmal Zemmar, a co-author of the study, said that what the team, then based in Vancouver, Canada, accidentally got, was the first-ever recording of a dying brain.
He told the BBC: "This was actually totally by chance, we did not plan to do this experiment or record these signals."
So will we get a glimpse back at time with loved ones and other happy memories? Dr Zemmar said it was impossible to tell.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.