this post was submitted on 17 Nov 2025
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Football
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I try to, yes. Don't you expect at least a baseline of moral consistency from human beings advocating for moral causes?
I don't mind people working for state owned companies, even if I would rather not have them in football. What I object to is someone as morally compromised on this issue taking a moral high ground on a different issue. I really don't suppose Guardiola would speak out on the behalf of political prisoners in the UAE.
I don't know, I feel like people can both advocate for moral cause while not being morally impeccable.
I'm going to be honest with you, sometimes I just feel like dropping modern professional football as a whole. The whole industry is corrupted as hell, FIFA is supporting petrostates dictatorships, national leagues try to optimize their profit by any way possible, clubs are owned more and more by investors who just see them as financial products and don't care about the game itself.
I'm really considering stopping following professional football and just go to my local stadium to follow a team at 4th division level.
So yeah, considering all of that, having a coach like Guardiola making this kind of statements isn't too bad in my perspective.