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Vesper

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Everything posted by Vesper

  1. almsot cost us a fucking goal against fuck this ref and Jorginho shit pulled Cole and no yellow earlier
  2. what a shit call CuCu did NOT foul him !!!
  3. I hate this ref already he is a hack
  4. Delap is going to be a beast for us
  5. reverse jinx weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
  6. people are acting like they are some shite team they are far from that
  7. American Girl in Italy 1951 https://www.orkinphoto.com/photographs/american-girl/ My mother, Ruth Orkin, had many loves. Photography and travel were two of them. When she was 17, my mother took a cross-country trip by herself, bicycling and hitchhiking from her home in Los Angeles to New York, snapping pictures along the way. She later moved to New York, where this spirit of adventure continued. She photographed Tanglewood’s summer music festivals, honed her craft in nightclubs, joined the Photo League, and with her first published story in Look magazine, became “a full-fledged photojournalist.” In 1951, Life sent her on assignment to Israel. From there she went to Italy, and it was in Florence that she met Jinx Allen (now known as Ninalee Craig), a painter and fellow American. The two were talking about their shared experiences traveling alone as young single women, when my mother had an idea. “Come on,” she said, “lets go out and shoot pictures of what it’s really like.” In the morning, while the Italian women were inside preparing lunch, Jinx gawked at statues, asked Military officials for directions, fumbled with lire and flirted in cafes while my mother photographed her. They had a lot of fun, as the photograph, “Staring at the Statue”, demonstrates. My mother’s best known image, “American Girl in Italy” was also created as part of this series. My mother always encouraged me to go to Europe, which I finally did during my college years, exploring Italy on a diet of wine and cheese. I felt a tremendous connection with her while I was there. Even now, with memories of my own, when I think of Italy, I picture my mother’s photographs. She captured its essence, as she did with most things.
  8. the same for every Brasil Big 12 team. Palmeiras is especially obsessed with winning a global championship other than the disputed one they won at Copa Rio (played in 1951 and 1952 only) in 1951 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1951_Copa_Rio Big 12 clubs: Atlético Mineiro, Botafogo, Corinthians, Cruzeiro, Flamengo, Fluminense, Grêmio, Internacional, Palmeiras, Santos, São Paulo, and Vasco da Gama. These are the six Big 12 teams who have won either the Interncontinental Cup or the FIFA World Club Cup Intercontinental Cup winners Santos 1962, 1963 (the Pelé-led best ever, IMHO, Brasilian sides) São Paulo 1992, 1993 (Cafu-led) Grêmio 1983 (Renato Gaúcho-led) Flamengo 1981 (Zico-led) FWCC winners Corinthians 2000, 2012 (grrrr) São Paulo 2005 Internacional 2006 that leaves these six Big 12 Brasil teams without a true global championship (although the first 3 teams listed claim one, see below) Palmeiras (won the 1951 Copa Rio, but lost the Intercontinental Cup in 1999 and the FWCC final in 2021, (to Chels) Fluminense (won the 1952 Copa Rio, but lost the FWCC final in 2023, they did win the Tournoi de Paris in 1976 and 1987) Vasco da Gama (won the 1953 Torneio Octogonal Rivadavia Correa Meyer (played once, it was the successor to the Copa Rio), but lost the Intercontinental Cup in 1998 and the FWCC final in 2000, also lost the Small Club World Cup final in 1956, they also did win the Tournoi de Paris in 1957) Atlético Mineiro (they never played in the IC, nor in a FWCC final (they did win 3rd place in 2013), they did win the Tournoi de Paris in 1982) Botafogo (lost the Small Club World Cup final in 1952 and in 1957, never played in the IC nor in a FWCC final, they did win the Tournoi de Paris in 1963) Cruzeiro (lost the Intercontinental Cup in 1976 and in 1997, never played in a FWCC final)
  9. Jair Cunha shut down KK, Doue, Barcola, and Nuno Mendes in Botafogo's nil 1 upset of PSG just now
  10. not true, at least as far as I am concerned
  11. Judge rules that anti-woke is just racism You can put lipstick on a pig, but it's still a rancid bigot. https://www.publicnotice.co/p/william-young-trump-dei-lgbtq Earlier this week, a federal judge in Boston explicitly called out the Trump administration for its “palpably clear” discrimination against racial minorities and LGBTQ+ Americans in a case involving canceled grants from the National Institutes of Health. “Have we no shame?” Judge William Young asked, in an unmistakeable echo of attorney Joseph Welch, who famously punctured Joe McCarthy’s popularity with his simple plea for decency. Seventy-five years ago, McCarthy and his sidekick Roy Cohn hunted Communists. Now, Donald Trump, who was mentored by Cohn, hunts a different kind of subversive. In executive orders signed during his first weeks in office, he targeted “Illegal DEI and DEIA policies,” claiming that they violate civil rights laws. He declared that “it is the policy of the United States to recognize two sexes, male and female,” and branded “efforts to eradicate the biological reality of sex” as discriminatory against women and girls. This is a radical misstatement of the law. No court in the land has ever held that DEI — whatever that means — constitutes racial discrimination, or that allowing trans people to participate in society amounts to gender discrimination. It also defies the medical and scientific consensus about sex, gender, and biology. But no matter! The president redefined reality by executive fiat, and then instructed his minions to carry out a purge consistent with his edict. And purge, they did! The administration immediately moved to kick trans service members out of the military, reorient the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to focus on “DEI-related discrimination at work,” and pulled down websites on everything from baseball icon Jackie Robinson to transgender health care. But while the government was busy deleting pronouns from civil servants’ signature lines, it also slashed thousands of federal grants because some DOGE bro (or possibly an AI) decided that the recipient was vaguely “woke” — whatever that means. At NIH, more than a $1 billion of funding was cut because of its supposed association with “woke” ideologies. Blanket termination letters informed recipients that their funding was being cut, often in the middle of a multi-year grant, for vague thought crimes: How one would study, say, sickle cell anemia without discussing race is an exercise left for the reader. (Or not, since the government would probably pull a book on disease which primarily afflicts Black people off the shelves for being “DEI.”) A coalition of 16 blue states sued, and the case was joined with a similar one filed by several public health and labor groups. They argued that NIH “adopted a series of directives that blacklist certain topics — e.g., ‘DEI,’ ‘gender,’ or ‘vaccine hesitancy’ — that the Administration disfavors.” All the impoundment cases, which involve money appropriate by Congress which the Trump administration simply refuses to disburse, recite a now-familiar set of legal claims. And indeed the plaintiffs here, too, argue that the president is violating the Spending Clause and the separation of powers — essentially that he is stealing Congress’s power over the federal budget. They also call the grant terminations “arbitrary and capricious,” in violation of the Administrative Procedures Act. But here the plaintiffs make another argument in defense of their “woke” priorities. They note that statutes passed by Congress mandate that NIH fund research that supports racial equity and better health outcomes for gender and racial minorities. “The Challenged Directives purport to restrict research on subjects that Congress has expressly required NIH to support,” they write. “In declaring research related to DEI, gender identity, and transgender health off-limits, defendants’ actions are contrary to congressional mandates.” So, for instance, 42 U.S.C. §282(h) instructs the NIH director to “support[] programs for research, research training, recruitment, and other activities, provide for an increase in the number of women and individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds (including racial and ethnic minorities) in the fields of biomedical and behavioral research.” Similarly, 42 U.S.C. §283p says that NIH “shall encourage efforts to improve research related to the health of sexual and gender minority populations, including by (1) facilitating increased participation of sexual and gender minority populations in clinical research” and by “facilitating the development of valid and reliable methods for research relevant to sexual and gender minority populations.” Congress even established a National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities! So Trump simply cannot terminate all grants that touch on race and gender simply by labeling them as “discriminatory” or “divisive.” Or, he can, but judges are likely to rule that he’s done so unlawfully, as happened Monday in Boston. “My duty is to call it out” Judge Young, who was appointed to the federal bench by Ronald Reagan in 1985, called the terminations “arbitrary and capricious.” But he went further than other judges in the many impoundment suits, calling the administration out for its flagrant animus against racial and sexual minorities. “I am hesitant to draw this conclusion — but I have an unflinching obligation to draw it — that this represents racial discrimination and discrimination against America’s LGBTQ community,” he said, according to Politico. “That’s what this is. I would be blind not to call it out. My duty is to call it out.“ DOJ lawyer Thomas Ports Jr. countered by echoing NIH’s boilerplate termination notices. “Research programs based on gender identity are often unscientific, have little identifiable return on investment and do nothing to enhance the health of many Americans. Many such studies ignore rather than seriously examine biological realities,” he said. ”It is an improvement to eliminate these.” “Where’s the support for that?” Judge Young shot back. “I see no evidence of that.” Of course, there is no such evidence of that, which is why the government never presented any. Instead it pointed to Trump’s executive orders, insisting that the president gets to make his own reality. Other than various jurisdictional arguments aimed at getting the case moved to another court, they really had no defense. Ports wasn’t even able to define “DEI” when pressed by the court. “You are bearing down on people of color because of their color,” the judge hammered on. “The Constitution will not permit that.” Hit dogs holler In 1954, Welch’s “Have you no decency, sir!” marked the beginning of the end for Sen. Joe McCarthy. Public support for his witch hunt collapsed, and he died in disgrace three years later. But decency is in short supply these days, and the White House is digging in. “It is appalling that a federal judge would use court proceedings to express his political views and preferences,” White House flack Kush Desai sneered. “How is a judge going to deliver an impartial decision when he explicitly stated his biased opinion that the administration’s retraction of illegal DEI funding is racist and anti-LGBTQ?” A hit dog will holler. And maybe that dog will win a reprieve from the Supreme Court, too. But even so, it still matters when old bulls of the judiciary, particularly conservatives like Judge Young and Judge Royce Lamberth, who enjoined attacks on trans prisoners, call out the Trump regime for turning civil rights laws on their head. “I’ve never seen a record where racial discrimination was so palpable,” Judge Young fumed. “I’ve sat on this bench now for 40 years. I’ve never seen government racial discrimination like this.” More of this, please.
  12. until this iteration of the FWCC the only UEFA teams to lose a game were
  13. very impressed with Al Hilal so much composure overall
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