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Thread: Coronavirus and the impact on football

  1. #1311
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    Quote Originally Posted by dicko1969 View Post
    It will be even harder to get players to go to Newcastle... the location isnt the best.
    They'll have to pay extra for that too.
    The location is fantastic. It's far and away one of the best Citys in the UK. It's right on the doorstep of Northumberland which is one of the most beautiful areas in Britain. Durham only a stones throw too.
    Passionate and loyal fans who adore the right manager who takes the club to heart. They love Rafa.
    Basically if it's done right it is a ready made package for success. The right manager, the right people in the "off pitch" roles and they'll be on the right track straight away. Easier said than done obviously but the location us the least of its worries. They attracted plenty of good players before so that wont be an issue now with the money they will have should it go through.

  2. #1312
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    Once again, I'm still totally baffled as to why 3000 fans of Atlético de Madrid were allowed to travel to Liverpool when parts of Spain and Madrid were already in lockdown phase....???

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52362099
    Offender Of The Offended...!!

    It`s Better To Reign In Hell, Than Serve In Heaven!

  3. #1313
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    Quote Originally Posted by justincredible View Post
    Once again, I'm still totally baffled as to why 3000 fans of Atlético de Madrid were allowed to travel to Liverpool when parts of Spain and Madrid were already in lockdown phase....???

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52362099
    Even more baffling, dublin was full of italians on the weekend of the cancelled Ireland Italy 6 nations match. Italy was the most affected country outside of China at that time, and yet they were allowed to fly in and shop/get pissed

  4. #1314
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    Quote Originally Posted by sydenham red View Post
    Even more baffling, dublin was full of italians on the weekend of the cancelled Ireland Italy 6 nations match. Italy was the most affected country outside of China at that time, and yet they were allowed to fly in and shop/get pissed
    Exactly, imagine having to forgo your precious Ryanair flight and a night or two in a hotel.? Fookin idiotas..!
    Offender Of The Offended...!!

    It`s Better To Reign In Hell, Than Serve In Heaven!

  5. #1315
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    Quote Originally Posted by CCTV View Post
    Gates’ Globalist Vaccine Agenda: A Win-Win for Pharma and Mandatory Vaccination

    By Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Chairman, Children’s Health Defense

    Vaccines, for Bill Gates, are a strategic philanthropy that feed his many vaccine-related businesses (including Microsoft’s ambition to control a global vaccination ID enterprise) and give him dictatorial control of global health policy.

    Gates’ obsession with vaccines seems to be fueled by a conviction to save the world with technology.

    Promising his share of $450 million of $1.2 billion to eradicate polio, Gates took control of India’s National Technical Advisory Group on Immunization (NTAGI), which mandated up to 50 doses (Table 1) of polio vaccines through overlapping immunization programs to children before the age of five. Indian doctors blame the Gates campaign for a devastating non-polio acute flaccid paralysis (NPAFP) epidemic that paralyzed 490,000 children beyond expected rates between 2000 and 2017. In 2017, the Indian government dialed back Gates’ vaccine regimen and asked Gates and his vaccine policies to leave India. NPAFP rates dropped precipitously.

    The most frightening [polio] epidemics in Congo, Afghanistan, and the Philippines are all linked to vaccines.
    In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) reluctantly admitted that the global explosion in polio is predominantly vaccine strain. The most frightening epidemics in Congo, Afghanistan, and the Philippines, are all linked to vaccines. In fact, by 2018, 70% of global polio cases were vaccine strain.

    In 2009, the Gates Foundation funded tests of experimental HPV vaccines, developed by Glaxo Smith Kline (GSK) and Merck, on 23,000 young girls in remote Indian provinces. Approximately 1,200 suffered severe side effects, including autoimmune and fertility disorders. Seven died. Indian government investigations charged that Gates-funded researchers committed pervasive ethical violations: pressuring vulnerable village girls into the trial, bullying parents, forging consent forms, and refusing medical care to the injured girls. The case is now in the country’s Supreme Court.

    South African newspapers complained, ‘We are guinea pigs for the drug makers.’
    In 2010, the Gates Foundation funded a phase 3 trial of GSK’s experimental malaria vaccine, killing 151 African infants and causing serious adverse effects, including paralysis, seizure, and febrile convulsions, to 1,048 of the 5,949 children.

    During Gates’ 2002 MenAfriVac campaign in Sub-Saharan Africa, Gates’ operatives forcibly vaccinated thousands of African children against meningitis. Approximately 50 of the 500 children vaccinated developed paralysis. South African newspapers complained, “We are guinea pigs for the drug makers.” Nelson Mandela’s former senior economist, Professor Patrick Bond, describes Gates’ philanthropic practices as “ruthless and immoral.”

    In 2010, when Gates committed $10 billion to the WHO, he said “We must make this the decade of vaccines.” A month later, Gates said in a TED Talk that new vaccines “could reduce population.” And, four years later, in 2014, Kenya’s Catholic Doctors Association accused the WHO of chemically sterilizing millions of unwilling Kenyan women with a “tetanus” vaccine campaign. Independent labs found a sterility formula in every vaccine tested. After denying the charges, WHO finally admitted it had been developing the sterility vaccines for over a decade. Similar accusations came from Tanzania, Nicaragua, Mexico, and the Philippines.

    A 2017 study (Morgenson et. al. 2017) showed that WHO’s popular DTP vaccine is killing more African children than the diseases it prevents. DTP-vaccinated girls suffered 10x the death rate of children who had not yet received the vaccine. WHO has refused to recall the lethal vaccine, which it forces upon tens of millions of African children annually.

    [Global public health officials] say he has diverted agency resources to serve his personal philosophy that good health only comes in a syringe.
    Global public health advocates around the world accuse Gates of steering WHO’s agenda away from the projects that are proven to curb infectious diseases: clean water, hygiene, nutrition, and economic development. The Gates Foundation spends only about $650 million of its $5 billion dollar budget on these areas. They say he has diverted agency resources to serve his personal philosophy that good health only comes in a syringe.

    In addition to using his philanthropy to control WHO, UNICEF, GAVI, and PATH, Gates funds a private pharmaceutical company that manufactures vaccines and is donating $50 million to 12 pharmaceutical companies to speed up development of a coronavirus vaccine. In his recent media appearances, Gates appears confident that the Covid-19 crisis will now give him the opportunity to force his dictatorial vaccine programs on all American children – and adults.
    https://childrenshealthdefense.org/news/government-corruption/gates-globalist-vaccine-agenda-a-win-win-for-pharma-and-mandatory-vaccination/

    Mr Kennedy talking on RT about the revolving doors and corruption within this sector. Critiquing the CDC and WHO
    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5CfLDXpC324



    Gates is a sick man, seen a Ted talk of his where he proposed global warming as problem with 4 variables, interestingly the variable he focused on most (almost exclusively) was reducing population.
    Some efficiencies to be found in energy production he stated, but the electronic services which one might propose as a self interest for himself, was beyond reproach.

    We've got a problem, the only solution, perhaps the final solution (again) Kill People.
    Eugenicists never change....

    Caught this on my Firestick the other day...Food for thought I have to say.....


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0hVnXnnhfQ

  6. #1316
    Quote Originally Posted by teesred View Post
    The location is fantastic. It's far and away one of the best Citys in the UK. It's right on the doorstep of Northumberland which is one of the most beautiful areas in Britain. Durham only a stones throw too.
    Passionate and loyal fans who adore the right manager who takes the club to heart. They love Rafa.
    Basically if it's done right it is a ready made package for success. The right manager, the right people in the "off pitch" roles and they'll be on the right track straight away. Easier said than done obviously but the location us the least of its worries. They attracted plenty of good players before so that wont be an issue now with the money they will have should it go through.
    I'm not exactly saying it's a shithole.
    Beautiful countryside etc

    But I think it will be hard to attract players unless they play silly money... which they probably will.

    It's not London Paris Madrid Barcelona or Monaco.
    Talking of Monaco since Newcastle last won anything they have leagues, cups and been to several Champions league semis and a final.

    Fantastic city Newcastle; great night out, great for students but for foreign wives and families cold and shit.
    Just how I see it in a million pound footballer world.

  7. #1317
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    Quote Originally Posted by dicko1969 View Post
    I'm not exactly saying it's a shithole.
    Beautiful countryside etc

    But I think it will be hard to attract players unless they play silly money... which they probably will.

    It's not London Paris Madrid Barcelona or Monaco.
    Talking of Monaco since Newcastle last won anything they have leagues, cups and been to several Champions league semis and a final.

    Fantastic city Newcastle; great night out, great for students but for foreign wives and families cold and shit.
    Just how I see it in a million pound footballer world.
    You could say that about any city in the UK or Europe. There are pros and cons for all of them. London seems to be the centre of the universe for foreign footballers but god knows why. It's a fantastic place but tgeres lots of downsides too.
    When City were taken over there cant have been many people who thought they would be where they are now. Chelsea were different, they attracted top players immediately due to having Mourinho, It took City a while and they were paying way over the odds for middle bracket players just to get them there. I'd personally say Newcastle are a way bigger club now than City were back then and have proved to a certain point that they can pull in big players. They have have had lots of big name players and managers already.
    Its the areas outside of the pitch they need to get right to make it work (just like LFC did) , I dont think it's just a case of throwing tons of money at it.

  8. #1318
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    Think this is a bollox decision by the Dutch FA to be honest. Smacks of keeping their golden boys (Ajax) on top of the pile. AZ Alkmaar would rightly be fuming what with being level with Ajax at the top of the table. Only GD separating them.....

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52376543
    Offender Of The Offended...!!

    It`s Better To Reign In Hell, Than Serve In Heaven!

  9. #1319
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    Quote Originally Posted by justincredible View Post
    Think this is a bollox decision by the Dutch FA to be honest. Smacks of keeping their golden boys (Ajax) on top of the pile. AZ Alkmaar would rightly be fuming what with being level with Ajax at the top of the table. Only GD separating them.....

    https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/52376543
    Agree. Overmars suggested it weeks ago. Van Gaal had a pop at Ajax about it, It stinks.

  10. #1320
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    Big Donald reckons we should be injecting Domestos while lying in the Sun. 😎😎😎

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