JocktheMotie
Habitual Fi LineStepper
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2008
- Messages
- 8,497
If Germany doesn't go to the next round I will have to cry.
I will definitely be on suicide watch.
Booo, I'm for Ghana.

If Germany doesn't go to the next round I will have to cry.
Booo, I'm for Ghana.
We agreed to Milton Friedman, anyway.
Which do you prefer?
"Underlying most arguments against the free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself."
OR
"I am favor of cutting taxes under any circumstances and for any excuse, for any reason, whenever it's possible."
(Is it me - or is Marcel Desailly something of an odd ball? lol.)
That was a good setpiece play off Mesut Ozil. Germany go through to face England.
Germany will beat England, 2-0 at least, it may even be 3-0 or 4-0, just like the Under 21 German team beat England by the count of 4-0. After that happens, yet another English media frenzy will erupt about the issue of what exactly inflicted this misfortune upon that glorious nation, was it the coach, the players, the fans, the vuvuzelas? None of that has anything to do with England's recent performance, those ideas are nothing but pitiable excuses for fanatics to avoid owning up to the fact that their team is just not very good, nowhere nearly meritorious enough to compete with opponents who are serious contenders for the World Cup.
Yet, according to you, FDG, the Italian culture does not approve of cheating, what on earth is going on here? Is there anything about the Italian general culture or the Italian soccer culture that promotes such behavior?
Mmm perhaps I was unclear, I do think the professional / competitive soccer culture encourages this behavior, basically any player who had to go through "younger" serie A team will have this fake / cheating behavior ingrained - there's no choice (except not playing professionally, of course - or joining a foreign team). I think a similar issue can be found in cycling with illicit performance enhancing drugs - nobody approves their usage, yet basically every professional engages used doping, simply because you won't reach professional level if you don't. They can be modeled as "positive feedback cycles", they'd need an exogenous shock to be "broken".
Time for all the anti-German prejudice in England to come to the surface again.
Germany will beat England, 2-0 at least, it may even be 3-0 or 4-0, just like the Under 21 German team beat England by the count of 4-0. After that happens, yet another English media frenzy will erupt about the issue of what exactly inflicted this misfortune upon that glorious nation, was it the coach, the players, the fans, the vuvuzelas? None of that has anything to do with England's recent performance, those ideas are nothing but pitiable excuses for fanatics to avoid owning up to the fact that their team is just not very good, nowhere nearly meritorious enough to compete with opponents who are serious contenders for the World Cup.