Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Social Media: A Double-Edged Sword



Ahhhhh, the dichotomy of Twitter.

This beautiful beast brings out the best and the balmiest banter between bloggers and blokes alike.

A captivating captain cultivates classy comments and commands cunts to cling to cowardice.

Whereas dismal displays demonstrate diabolical deviance from "devoted" detractors determined to deal out draining diatribes detrimental to the decency of discourse.

Every entity is entitled to express emotions, entertaining and eloquent. Eagerly enticing eyes and ears to eat up everything expelled to effect.

Far too many flounder in the fuckfest of foulmouthed football fans flagrantly defiling the foundations for which we fight.

Good guys grapple with greed, gazing at Glazers and Guardiolas longingly, a gleam of hope heaping expectations high, asking for hazardous amounts of hard cash for an influx of influential and inspiring signings, although infantile expectations out of jealousy for oil-flush jokers jeopardizes the financial well-being of a club.

Kicking each other, keyboard warriors keen to linger on lessons lost that should have been learned, many forget the luster this lovely, luminous game manifests in every match. We must muster more than mediocrity and maintain meaningful morals with the masses and our fellow man.

No more nonsense. Open minds offer opinions others only dream of owning. People owe it to each other to prevail over these pervasive presumptions of proper protocol and quit queuing up with rhetoric lacking rhyme or reason.

Rational thinking realizes every story has another side, so should something shift sans logic, trust that the truth shall be told in due time. Undermining each other ultimately vexes even the most vociferous vegan and wilts the will of proven winners who will want away from dealing with the Xenophobes about. Exits of the younger generations of fans and players alike will lead to the remaining yearning for their team of yesteryear.

The circus may be in town with silly season about, yet it need not be a zoo. With the right attitude one may be able to find their place of Zen.

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