If you think that's bad, check out the French team. There was a point in their last game where they had 10 black players on the field out of 11, and the final player's last name was Hernandez.
The selection is meritocratic. There's no room in sports for politics. This is just what happens with mass immigration.
Why so many blacks? As with most things the answer is genetics. You don't see tons of arabs on the team even though there's way more of them in France than blacks.
Why are blacks so good at endurance and running, and so low on impulse control and IQ? To get to the root of that you'd need a honest academia to research it, instead of actively doing anything in their power to subvert, hide, and sabotage anything that could even hint at some truth, so in other words we'll probably never know.
It's about as meritocratic as all those africans and arabs winning Miss pageants in Europe.
Soccer clubs are effectively establishment NGOs. They're constantly preaching leftist politics and "fighting against the right". Soccer is part of their propaganda. In Germany for example the far-left, antifa-supporting minister of the interior is also minister of sports, complete with rainbow armband.
If you think anything about that is organic, I have a bridge to sell you. Bread and games to normalize replacement.
Out of the top 15 football players there are like 4 maybe 5 black guys depending on how you consider Neymar. Or how England lost to Italy last Euro despite Italy having 0 diversity.
France having so many black players is odd and their performance so far has been less then great. They managed to get to quarter finals without scoring once and they were 0 0 with Portugal and won on penalties.
They may actually win with the lamest game performance ever.
I agree with the second half of your comment, but in regard to the first, if selection were purely meritocratic then players like Karim Benzema would've played for France their whole careers. Going the other way, without politics, a player like Marcus Thuram would never make the French squad. He's only there because of his famous footballing father and is woefully inadequate compared to the rest of the squad.
Also FYI, there are some extremely talented Arab players, but France can often tap up players from its territories and former colonies and those are dominated by blacks. Many black players declare for France despite not being born in France proper. Some of the best "French" players of all time were actually born in places like Zaire (e.g., Claude Makelele).
Is it, though? There's a lot that can be fudged. You can have DEI initiatives to get "underrepresented" people into positions such as coaches. Refs can be made to look the other way for select players and to focus on others. More subtly, rules can be added or removed that indirectly favor one race over another - I've heard basketball is notorious for this, but you'd have to ask someone more knowledgeable for specifics.
If you think that's bad, check out the French team. There was a point in their last game where they had 10 black players on the field out of 11, and the final player's last name was Hernandez.
I know what you mean, and I agree.
The selection is meritocratic. There's no room in sports for politics. This is just what happens with mass immigration.
Why so many blacks? As with most things the answer is genetics. You don't see tons of arabs on the team even though there's way more of them in France than blacks.
Why are blacks so good at endurance and running, and so low on impulse control and IQ? To get to the root of that you'd need a honest academia to research it, instead of actively doing anything in their power to subvert, hide, and sabotage anything that could even hint at some truth, so in other words we'll probably never know.
It's about as meritocratic as all those africans and arabs winning Miss pageants in Europe.
Soccer clubs are effectively establishment NGOs. They're constantly preaching leftist politics and "fighting against the right". Soccer is part of their propaganda. In Germany for example the far-left, antifa-supporting minister of the interior is also minister of sports, complete with rainbow armband.
If you think anything about that is organic, I have a bridge to sell you. Bread and games to normalize replacement.
Government sport ministers have nothing to do with professional clubs. You think they're picking worse players on purpose?
Out of the top 15 football players there are like 4 maybe 5 black guys depending on how you consider Neymar. Or how England lost to Italy last Euro despite Italy having 0 diversity.
France having so many black players is odd and their performance so far has been less then great. They managed to get to quarter finals without scoring once and they were 0 0 with Portugal and won on penalties.
They may actually win with the lamest game performance ever.
A microcosm for the Black experience in the West.
I agree with the second half of your comment, but in regard to the first, if selection were purely meritocratic then players like Karim Benzema would've played for France their whole careers. Going the other way, without politics, a player like Marcus Thuram would never make the French squad. He's only there because of his famous footballing father and is woefully inadequate compared to the rest of the squad.
Also FYI, there are some extremely talented Arab players, but France can often tap up players from its territories and former colonies and those are dominated by blacks. Many black players declare for France despite not being born in France proper. Some of the best "French" players of all time were actually born in places like Zaire (e.g., Claude Makelele).
Benzema's an 'odd' case though. What a story!
Is it, though? There's a lot that can be fudged. You can have DEI initiatives to get "underrepresented" people into positions such as coaches. Refs can be made to look the other way for select players and to focus on others. More subtly, rules can be added or removed that indirectly favor one race over another - I've heard basketball is notorious for this, but you'd have to ask someone more knowledgeable for specifics.