Let's check in with Hamas.
I only care about softball and whatever event Parker Valby qualified for.
So that opening ceremony really has people riled up. I didn't realize just how bad it was. Not the "openly satanic" stuff they're talking about or the guys balls hanging out, but the burning of the Statue of Liberty for example. There's a long ass list of pretty egregious WEF agenda, death to America and Christianity shit in that ceremony.
No, I've only seen, "Christians are more offended by this than atheists/leftists have ever been offended about anything!"Have you seen the cut and paste fb excuse that it actually some pagan dealie no one ever heard of not a riff on one of the most famous paintings of one of the most famous events that nearly everyone instantly knows whether or not theyāre Christian? Some expert said so!
Meanwhile, the food options available ā widely reported to be dominated by a vegan diet ā are so bad that even the British team has brought its own chef.
It is easy to dismiss the concerns raised by the athletes, but Aussie swimming great James Magnussen has now spoken out to reveal there is substance to the complaints from athletes that food in the village can hamper their performance and wellbeing.
āThe lack of world records boils down to this whole eco-friendly, carbon footprint, vegan-first mentality rather than high performance.
āThey had a charter that said 60 per cent of food in the village had to be vegan-friendly and the day before the opening ceremony they ran out of meat and dairy options in the village because they hadnāt anticipated so many athletes would be choosing the meat and dairy options over the vegan-friendly ones.
āThe caterer had to rejig their numbers and bring in more of those products because surprise, surprise - world class athletes donāt have vegan diets.
Does track have a white people problem?Swimming has a diversity problem. Can this generation of Olympians change that?
Olympians Simone Manuel and Shaine Casas have a chance to inspire a new generation of swimmers in a sport traditionally plagued by diversity issues.www.latimes.com
Well I wouldn't call it a problem, per se. Black people just don't want to swim competitively. There used to be a lot of barriers (i.e., swimming being mostly a "country club" sport), but that's no longer the case.