I was happy to see Man United's anti-white squad eliminated from the group stage by Red Bull Leipzig, who also start their own host of Africans. Leipzig's black defenders had a series of gaffes that nearly cost them their 3-0 lead, but ultimately United's black defenders proved to be the most inept on the day.
In the far more accentuated headline, reigning champ Paris Saint-Germain had its game against the last-place Turkish side SUSPENDED due to RACISM. I will recount the situation clearly for the record, in case historians one day look back to scratch their heads over cases like these.
In the 14th minute, a black PSG assistant coach was given a red card for insubordination (likely shouting at the referee, although the particulars are unclear). The fourth official, who is Romanian, helped the referee identify the offending party by telling him "the black guy" said it. An African player for the Turkish club took offense at this identifier and rose up from his seat on the substitutes bench to accost the fourth official, saying something along the lines of "why do you describe him as a
black guy?" He will be remembered as the hero in this ordeal.
As the stink was being raised, PSG's brave non-white players, including Neymar and Mbappe, joined in the indignation against this white referee doing a racism by describing a black coach as "black." Eventually, both teams resolved to refuse to play, and the game will resume tomorrow with 15 minutes off the clock.
Western press is of course hailing the whistle-blowers and protesters for their courage and principle. Part of this was made possible by the mandated empty stadiums, meaning there are no fans to boo the spontaneous player strike. In the absence of stadium reaction, the press and tv studio narrative goes unopposed, and the audience as usual is told what to think.
This sort of trifle actually has a precedent. In the English Championship,
Leeds keeper Kiko Casilla was overheard telling his teammate to mark "the black guy" on a corner kick. After a five month "investigation," he was suspended for eight games for his racism. I doubt this Romanian official will be so lucky.