What's new

Official FIFA World Cup 2014 Thread

  • Thread starter Thread starter Deleted member 848
  • Start date Start date
@Zulu fly to SLC and watch World Cup with me. Don't be lame.

I have Coca Cola.


£¥£

Lol... Totally would but...

At DSU we have these LCD screens all over our campus that have stupid advertisements and show upcoming campus events....

Well yeasterday my boss and I hooked up a computer to one that is in the lobby of our building so we could stream all the World Cup games. Today we are grabbing all the couches from our building and putting them in our lobby, to create an "Official DSU World Cup Party Zone"!!!


Ps. Please send coke via UPS/FedEx/USPS to DSU Science building!!
 
If you guys want to see some insane footwork with a soccer ball go youtube Sean Ganier. He is the World Champion Free Stylist in soccer. Just insane skill. The one where he dresses up as the old man and then dominates every guy on the court is great. Even pulls a guys pants down in the middle of a trick.
 
If you guys want to see some insane footwork with a soccer ball go youtube Sean Ganier. He is the World Champion Free Stylist in soccer. Just insane skill. The one where he dresses up as the old man and then dominates every guy on the court is great. Even pulls a guys pants down in the middle of a trick.

Which World Cup team he on???
 
Lol.

I don't think the stadium in the biggest city (São Paulo) is finished. The roofing and toilets aren't even installed. Mass demonstrations are taking place. In São Paulo, a city of 20 million, the subway system is at a standstill because the subway workers are on strike. People have been displaced without compensation in order to build these venues. Millions are pissed off because of all these billions being wasted on games rather than improving education, hospitals, and infrastructure.

Team USA flew into Guarulhos airport in São Paulo. They were staying in a place in the bairro Barra Funda. It's literally like 5 miles away. As missionaries, you could literally walk hauling all of your crap there in probably 1-2 hrs. Even in the worst traffic it normally took us maybe 25 mins to get from the airport to the Barra Funda by car.

It took team USA 4 hrs because traffic was so bad. That's like taking 4 hrs to drive from the Delta Center to Rice Ecceles. How ridiculous is that?

These games could be really embarrassing. Toilets aren't even installed yet in the main stadium (their Jerry World). Toilets.

Probably a good thing too. The people of Brazil have been abused royally by rich land owners and corrupt government officials.
 
Last edited:
Awesome World Cup commercial!!

[video=YouTube;iaVtinE8oO8[/MEDIA]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaVtinE8oO8
 
You're assuming that'd be the case. Identity is a very individual thing in a your mileage may vary kind of way. Different people have different experiences.

Also, us Canadians and Americans have a very different experience because of the way our countries operate. Both Canada and the USandA have always applied Jus Soli to citizenship, meaning all you had to do was be born here to be a citizen. It didn't matter if your parents arrived in the country earlier that day. Many European countries don't have that. This was especially the case 15-20 years ago and earlier. Many people were born in Germany, even to German-born parents, and weren't citizens because their grandparents moved from Turkey or Serbia and the whole family were still considered Turkish or Serbian "guest workers" and therefore foreign nationals.

In some cases, you do have footballers who literally could not play for the country they were born in because they did not hold its citizenship(countries like Sweden and Germany also forbid dual citizenship), but you also have cases like Croatia's Ivan Klasnic, who's famous for coming back from two kidney transplants to score in the quarterfinals of the European championship. Klasnic wasn't born in Croatia, but in Germany to ethnic Croat parents. He held Croatian citizenship, but was offered German when he first burst onto the scene as a talented teenager. The offer, of course, had to do with the German football federation wanting him to play for Germany. He said no to both the passport and the German team, as he claimed he didn't feel German. Hard to argue with him, as he grew up being told by the German state that his family were temporary workers who were expected to return to Croatia(his parents aren't even from there, but from Bosnia) at some undefined future point and that they were not going to be granted citizenship because they were not ethnic Germans. I wouldn't feel very German either.

This. I lived in Germany for a year during the 4th grade, and I was born there. If you're Albanian, "yugoslavian" (we'll throw all of those Balkan countries in there), or Turkish, you never really feel "German". I know this both from personal experience (only made Turkish friends in my entire year of schooling there at age 9) and from the tens of relatives that live all spread out through Deutschland.
 
Lol... Totally would but...

At DSU we have these LCD screens all over our campus that have stupid advertisements and show upcoming campus events....

Well yeasterday my boss and I hooked up a computer to one that is in the lobby of our building so we could stream all the World Cup games. Today we are grabbing all the couches from our building and putting them in our lobby, to create an "Official DSU World Cup Party Zone"!!!


Ps. Please send coke via UPS/FedEx/USPS to DSU Science building!!

Lol sounds rad.


£¥£
 
Well dala was wondering why he wouldn't play for Croatia. Ibrahimovic's parents also are a Bosnian and a Croatian. So there would be that conflict as well. Afaik he was born in Sweden, fully integrated in society there and I think that's a pretty good foundation for someone to feel Swedish, isn't it?

Yeah, he sounds fully integrated when talking about his childhood, alright. https://www.spiegel.de/internationa...n-ibrahimovic-attacks-guardiola-a-925691.html

"My neighborhood, Rosengard, was home to Turks, Yugoslavs, Palestinians and Poles. I was 16 when I first went to the city centre of Malmo; I never watched Swedish TV. My teammates at (football club) Malmo FF were called Mattisson, Persson or Ohlsson. I was an outsider. My coach wanted me to play in a way that served the team: making simple passes, and running more. I thought to myself: **** you, if I can dribble round three players, I'm going to do it. I am never going to be a real Swede anyway, so why should I play like one? The coach often took me off the pitch. My teammates had an easier time. They were blond, played in a way that served the team, and they ran. But instead of giving up, I became angry and tried to become even better. That is what made me the player I am."

Words of a man who feels truly Swedish and had no negative experiences based on his immigrant background.


It's also not correct what you state about the German citizenship process. Truth be told: Since 2000 if your parents are living in Germany for at least 8 years and have a permanent permit and give birth to a child this child has the choice to choose between the German citizenship and their parents country if that country allows it. This procedure could be done in retrospect up to 10 years(e.g. 1990 born kid with foreign parents who were in Germany with a permanent permit since 1982)

Notice that I said "This was especially the case 15-20 years ago and earlier." Also, notice that most current professional footballers were born before 2000.

Story I heard about Klasnic is that he never thought he'd make the German national team. So he chose Croatia because he wanted to play internationally. In hindsight, he'd have never made the German nationalteam skillwise.

Klasnić did not have German citizenship, as I believe is still the case.
 
Hey Jim did you walked across Southland drive yesterday by any chance? I could swear I saw dude with beard and guitar case on the back looking exactly like you crossing street around 3 pm yesterday:).
 
It's not true. All of toilets are installed. Today they are finishing the last adjustments. It's normal..

World Cup will be a huge success
 
It was a huge hassle for me trying to get my citizenship in Germany even though I was born in Nürtingen-- my parents eventually gave up, and just got a travel document for me. We left to Canada 2 years after my birth. Luckily, Canada gave me my citizenship 4 years later :)
 
I was in sau paulo a few years ago.

It is a toilet. (Literally smells like one)
 
It's not true. All of toilets are installed. Today they are finishing the last adjustments. It's normal..

World Cup will be a huge success

Ok. I'm 3 hrs behind Paulistas. So apparently they've installed all the toilets now. Whether or not they work? Another issue.

Now, in the stadiums do they have you stuff the toilet paper in a can next to the toilet? Or do these toilets actually flush toilet paper down? I saw only a few places in all the time I spent in the state or São Paulo that could handle toilet paper being flushed down the toilet.

It's funny, because we Americans think that's so common. Yet, I think most places around the world have a garbage can nearby to stuff your used toilet paper... Some, especially in Asia, don't even have that!

What will be interesting what "success" is.

The traffic and hospitals are still horrific and a subway strike is set for tomorrow. They've spent billions on stadiums but the roads are still terrible and hospitals underfunded. Literally, main roads in São Paulo are like tiny 2 lane avenues when they should be 4-5 lane highways. It would be like I-15 here in utah being the size of legacy or bangeter. Could you imagine how terrible the traffic would be in slc?
 
Back
Top