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jawoll.
Throwback als er bei uns nicht an fucking vitus eicher vorbeikam xdddddWhat, wyld.
City natürlich Scheißverein hoch Zehn, aber ich gönn Ortega, dass der in seiner Karriere nochmal richtig Geld verdienen darf.
bro, das ist der meister der premier league. das ist ja kein psg, aber selbst dahin wäre der sprung von bielefeld nachvollziehbar. klar macht der da kohle, aber wie jebediah schon sagte: der dude ist vor paar jahren noch durch die deutsche provinz gereist und kann jetzt mit absoluten weltstars trainieren (und evtl. sogar spielen). komplett geil.Wow, reiner Cash Move. Hätte ich nicht erwartet von ihm ehrlich gesagt.
Ja, sei ihm das Geld usw. gegönnt aber aus rein sportlicher (ehrgeiziger) Sicht ist das genauso dumm wie der Wechsel von Starke oder Ulreich wobei letzterer ja noch zwischendurch von Neuers Verletzung profitiert hat.bro, das ist der meister der premier league. das ist ja kein psg, aber selbst dahin wäre der sprung von bielefeld nachvollziehbar. klar macht der da kohle, aber wie jebediah schon sagte: der dude ist vor paar jahren noch durch die deutsche provinz gereist und kann jetzt mit absoluten weltstars trainieren (und evtl. sogar spielen). komplett geil.
Premier League aber mit nem Spielplan des Todes. Da braucht es aus sportlicher Sicht nicht unbedingt ne Verletzung, da man im Pokal eh ran darf. Also wenn man da zwischen City oder Union wählen darf...Ja, sei ihm das Geld usw. gegönnt aber aus rein sportlicher (ehrgeiziger) Sicht ist das genauso dumm wie der Wechsel von Starke oder Ulreich wobei letzterer ja noch zwischendurch von Neuers Verletzung profitiert hat.
Da steht wirklich "Eicher im Training, 2014" drunter hahahahahaha #hackerpschorr
90er UK boygroup mitglied das für die raps zuständig ist und später drogensüchtig in 2-Zimmer Wohnung mit white trash hoe wohnt...
Go a few minutes east of the city centre, and walk from New Islington into Ancoats. Block follows block of newly built and freshly converted flats and houses, many lining a lovely marina that glistens in the July sun. You can rent or buy these places right now, as long as you don’t mind how much some look like pile-em-high student boxesand that they all cost a packet. This is what post-industrial regeneration looks like, right? Redbrick in tooth and claw. But note something: almost 1,500 of these homes come from just one developer, and in that lies an entire sobering story.
Launched in 2014, Manchester Life was hailed as a “£1bn deal” between the city council and the Abu Dhabi-based owner of Manchester City football club. The local authority had swaths of brownfield and Sheikh Mansour, the club’s owner, ranked among the richest men on the planet. Working together, the result would be homes for people who desperately needed them and pots of cash. The council’s then leader, Richard Leese, promised “a world-class exemplar of regeneration”.
It was a huge advance for Sheikh Mansour who had, only half a decade earlier in 2008, bought a struggling football club. Now his investment fund was entering a joint venture with the British state (albeit at local level), getting its hands on prime real estate and shaping the city’s very geography. Those of Vladimir Putin’s oligarchs who trousered chunks of London could never dream of such a glittering prize.
As one of the rulers of an autocratic kingdom that has an appalling reputation for repression and an addiction to oil revenues, Sheikh Mansour stood to gain so much from this partnership. It was the council that held almost all the cards: the hectares of publicly owned land, the planning regime, the public subsidies. Yet somehow, according to new research shared exclusively today with the Guardian and authored by academics at Sheffield University, it was Sheikh Mansour who pocketed almost all the winnings. The report says that nine sites were sold to the sheikh at a fraction of their value, and well below what other plots nearby fetched (the council says it used independent experts using standard valuations, although it won’t give any more details). They were on leases lasting 999 years, well beyond the norm. And the fund shifted what had been public assets to companies registered in Jersey.
Bernstein ran the council for nearly two decades until 2017, and sat on the board of Manchester Life. Yet its success has come at a high price for the little people who just happen to live in the city. Not only have the assets they owned been sold cheap, they have got little back. The nine developed sites have no social or affordable housing, which the council’s planning officers justified with statements such as: “There is already a high level of affordable housing in the immediate area.” The same council admitted earlier this year that nearly 4,000 of the city’s children sleep each night in temporary accommodation.
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