FIFA president, Italian-Swiss, heterosexual and millionaire married lawyer Gianni Infantino said on Saturday (19th) that he feels like a Qatari, Arab, African, gay and migrant worker. “I’m sitting today,” he said on Saturday. As I write this, I probably don’t feel it anymore. They have these kinds of feelings that also occur in drunkenness and in the manic phase of bipolar disorder.
They usually don’t have too many emotions at once, but if Infantino is multilingual (he speaks Italian, French, Spanish, German, English and Arabic) why not be too emotional (Qatar, Arab, African, gay and migrant worker)?
I make efforts of empathy similar to Infantino’s, but I don’t feel like an Italian-Swiss, a lawyer, a married person, or a millionaire. Not for a second. They told me in court that it’s not worth feeling like a lawyer, you have to be a lawyer. Maybe I don’t feel strong enough, or even though I do, I’m an empathetic psychopath.
Infantino felt all this to feel comfortable at the beginning of football at the World Cup in Qatar, which was very profitable economically and very uncomfortable politically. The World Cup in Qatar is what you want emotionally because expressions of emotion are free, useful and almost unlimited. Almost because Infantino doesn’t feel like a dolphin (perhaps because of a lack of time or interest). It would have been nice for Infantino to feel like a woman—because half the population is limited by strict laws and customs—but without a male guardian to give her permission, she wouldn’t be president of FIFA.
Let’s be roughly paradoxical: Infantino didn’t have the courage to feel like a woman because women didn’t let him and football is football, but in this way he left out a very large part of the problem in Qatar before he denounced the well-known. European hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is pretending to be qualities or feelings as opposed to what is actually experienced or experienced. What a coincidence! Revealed feelings, the sincerity of which is difficult to verify.
Source: Informacion

Dolores Johnson is a voice of reason at “Social Bites”. As an opinion writer, she provides her readers with insightful commentary on the most pressing issues of the day. With her well-informed perspectives and clear writing style, Dolores helps readers navigate the complex world of news and politics, providing a balanced and thoughtful view on the most important topics of the moment.