@Geddar, hvis du er en del af partshøringen, så kog de links ned og smid nogle konklusioner på bordet tak...
Snak
man 14. feb 2022
Det virker efterhånden lidt håbløst @City.
Du vil jo ikke forstå det eller sætte dig ind i det. Det synes jeg egentlig er fair nok. Men så synes jeg at man skal undlade at spørge til det :)
Du vil jo ikke forstå det eller sætte dig ind i det. Det synes jeg egentlig er fair nok. Men så synes jeg at man skal undlade at spørge til det :)
man 14. feb 2022
@Geddar jeg kan desværre ikke tre ting på én gang, selvom det kunne være praktisk her og nu.
@TiA, jeg kan ikke tage stilling til konklusioner, som ikke er postet endnu fra YMWA"96"
@TiA, jeg kan ikke tage stilling til konklusioner, som ikke er postet endnu fra YMWA"96"
Så må du jo læse det, når du har lidt tid fri. Nu har du i hvert fald fået relevant læsestof.
https://kortlink.dk/sudv
man 14. feb 2022
Jeg ved hvor det her bære her.
Jeg frikender hermed Manchester City for at være statsejet
1 .På grundlag af manglende eller slet ingen bevisførelser herfra.
2.Sagen YMWA"96" versus City Ownership bortfalder hermed.
Jeg ønsker alle implicerede parter fortsat en rigtig god aften :)
Jeg frikender hermed Manchester City for at være statsejet
1 .På grundlag af manglende eller slet ingen bevisførelser herfra.
2.Sagen YMWA"96" versus City Ownership bortfalder hermed.
Jeg ønsker alle implicerede parter fortsat en rigtig god aften :)
man 14. feb 2022
Jeg har engang snavet med Natasha Hamilton. Så er det sagt. Det var så mit input. Lad os se hvad Citybot spinner på.
Det er pænt dumt at skrive der ikke er fremført beviser, når du ikke gider læse de links, hvor beviserne præsenteres.
https://kortlink.dk/sudv
man 14. feb 2022
@Geddar, så må jeg leve med at være dum...
Jeg skal til at forberede City Preview til morgendagens kamp i CL mod Sporting. Så ham den dumme har ikke mere tid lige nu...
Jeg skal til at forberede City Preview til morgendagens kamp i CL mod Sporting. Så ham den dumme har ikke mere tid lige nu...
man 14. feb 2022
@City
Nu var det egentlig ikke meningen det her skulle dreje sig om klubbens ejerskab. Jeg svarede Nick R. omkring problematikken om sponsorater.
Nu spurgte du så ind til om jeg kunne give dig noget omkring City´s ejerskab, hvilket jeg så har gjort. Jeg ved ikke rigtig hvad du ikke forstår i artiklen, for det står jo rimeligt klart.
Abu Dhabi is the wealthiest and most powerful of the seven emirates that comprise the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The man who controls Abu Dhabi and dictates policy is Sheikh Mansour´s brother, Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. And the men who run Manchester City are Mohamed bin Zayed´s key lieutenants, not Mansour´s. Chief among them is Khaldoon Al Mubarak, club chairman since 2008, and the Crown Prince´s right-hand man. Mubarak is also CEO of Mohamed bin Zayed´s mega-corporation Mubadala, which has assets of £50 billion, and invests vast sums of money around the world in sectors as diverse as real estate, pharmaceuticals, and aeronautics. Mohamed bin Zayed is also the driving force behind the UAE´s efforts to develop a domestic defence industry, which means he can now manufacture weapons and sell them to his own increasingly active army. All powerful and unencumbered by the need to justify his war-mongering in places like Yemen, which he has helped to destroy, Mohamed bin Zayed is fast becoming a one-man military-industrial complex.
Another key member of the team is the Australian Simon Pearce, also a Manchester City director, and Abu Dhabi´s head of strategic communications. Pearce made his name at the public relations firm Burson-Marsteller, whose work with clients such as Nicolai Ceaucescu, Blackwater and Union Carbide led to the famous quote "when evil needs public relations, evil has Burson-Marsteller on speed-dial." Abu Dhabi made a direct hire and Pearce is charged with protecting and promoting Abu Dhabi´s reputation. In examining their motives for buying Manchester City it helps if you think of Abu Dhabi as a corporation as well as a city-state, and Pearce is as comfortable offering advice on business deals as he is advising on matters of domestic and foreign policy.
Geddar har osse henvist til artikler osv, du er jo nød til at læse tingene fra respekteret journalister, der er eksperter på Mellemøsten og hvordan landene fungere med deres kongedømmer osv.
Nu var det egentlig ikke meningen det her skulle dreje sig om klubbens ejerskab. Jeg svarede Nick R. omkring problematikken om sponsorater.
Nu spurgte du så ind til om jeg kunne give dig noget omkring City´s ejerskab, hvilket jeg så har gjort. Jeg ved ikke rigtig hvad du ikke forstår i artiklen, for det står jo rimeligt klart.
Abu Dhabi is the wealthiest and most powerful of the seven emirates that comprise the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The man who controls Abu Dhabi and dictates policy is Sheikh Mansour´s brother, Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. And the men who run Manchester City are Mohamed bin Zayed´s key lieutenants, not Mansour´s. Chief among them is Khaldoon Al Mubarak, club chairman since 2008, and the Crown Prince´s right-hand man. Mubarak is also CEO of Mohamed bin Zayed´s mega-corporation Mubadala, which has assets of £50 billion, and invests vast sums of money around the world in sectors as diverse as real estate, pharmaceuticals, and aeronautics. Mohamed bin Zayed is also the driving force behind the UAE´s efforts to develop a domestic defence industry, which means he can now manufacture weapons and sell them to his own increasingly active army. All powerful and unencumbered by the need to justify his war-mongering in places like Yemen, which he has helped to destroy, Mohamed bin Zayed is fast becoming a one-man military-industrial complex.
Another key member of the team is the Australian Simon Pearce, also a Manchester City director, and Abu Dhabi´s head of strategic communications. Pearce made his name at the public relations firm Burson-Marsteller, whose work with clients such as Nicolai Ceaucescu, Blackwater and Union Carbide led to the famous quote "when evil needs public relations, evil has Burson-Marsteller on speed-dial." Abu Dhabi made a direct hire and Pearce is charged with protecting and promoting Abu Dhabi´s reputation. In examining their motives for buying Manchester City it helps if you think of Abu Dhabi as a corporation as well as a city-state, and Pearce is as comfortable offering advice on business deals as he is advising on matters of domestic and foreign policy.
Geddar har osse henvist til artikler osv, du er jo nød til at læse tingene fra respekteret journalister, der er eksperter på Mellemøsten og hvordan landene fungere med deres kongedømmer osv.
“Some people believe football is a matter of life and death, I am very disappointed with that attitude. I can assure you it is much, much more important than that.”
Bill Shankly
