In a statement, the federation said that it would take the “necessary legal action” and told the female players that “playing for the national team is an obligation on any member of the federation called upon to do so”.

  • @[email protected]
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    711 months ago

    From an outside perspective this whole thing seems to be blown way out of proportion. It’s a dumb mistake, apologize and move on? Why does this need to be world news, require government involvement and cost multiple people’s careers?

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        I’ve been touched in an inappropriate place when I didn’t want to be more than once. I just said I didn’t appreciate it, the person touching me apologized and that was it. I think it’s absolute insanity to demand someones life to be ruined over something like that. People simply make bad judgement calls sometimes.

        • @[email protected]
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          4411 months ago

          Let’s be clear. If his life gets ruined he did it to himself. This whole thing would have been forgotten if he sincerely apologised on the first day but he is choosing to bully Jenni Hermoso instead.

        • exscape
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          3411 months ago

          Threatening to sue doesn’t sound like apologizing though.

            • Unaware7013
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              2511 months ago

              People want a lot of things they’re not likely to get.

              Sometimes when you fuck up, you don’t get to keep your job afterwards. Quadrupling down and suing because you fucked up and don’t want to take your lumps just makes you look worse in the long run.

              • @[email protected]
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                011 months ago

                Right, people should never defend themselves and just go with what popular opinion demands of them. Because social media is always right about such things.

                • Unaware7013
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                  1811 months ago

                  Aside from the massive strawman here, you’re defending a dude who sexually assaulted a player under them in public and on film.

                  In this case, yes, exactly what you said entirely unironically. He shouldn’t defend himself for committing sexual assault because that’s unacceptable no matter what, and he should have gone with the popular demands to step down for committing an unacceptable act. Because social media is right in this case.

            • bedrooms
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              811 months ago

              Okay, so you’re arguing that this guy should be let alone after he allegedly lied. He said it was the female player who told him to kiss in her lips. That’s your position. Alright, everyone, he keeps his job, nothing to see here!

              • @[email protected]
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                011 months ago

                I’m saying I believe they can figure it out amongst themselves without massive international attention. Social media has this tendency to blow things way out of proportion despite not even knowing any of the context. I don’t know what the fair resolution would be, but it seems odd to me that this mans life should be ruined over a kiss.

        • Shambling Shapes
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          1911 months ago

          “the person touching me apologized”

          Important part missing from this puzzle; any acknowledgment or apology from the leader of an organization sexually harassing women he has power over.

          • @[email protected]
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            011 months ago

            I’m pretty certain he has already publicly apologized though. Not to mention that we have no clue about their private interactions.

            Again, this doesn’t seem like something that requires international attention. I believe the two of them could figure it out themselves just fine.

            • Shambling Shapes
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              11 months ago

              “I’m pretty certain he has already publicly apologized though.”

              Feel free to share evidence of the public apology, you seem to be remembering something no one else saw. All I’m seeing is him making excuses, no apology.

                • Unaware7013
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                  11 months ago

                  We saw it as something natural and normal," he continued in the video — which was not posted on federation’s social media channels. “But on the outside it has caused commotion, because people have felt hurt by it, so I have to apologize; there’s no alternative. I have to learn from this and understand that a president of an institution as important as the federation — above all in ceremonies and that kind of thing — should be more careful.”

                  He did not address his postgame locker-room declaration that he would marry Hermoso; nor his celebration shortly after the final whistle, which included grabbing his crotch; nor the battle with women’s national team players that he publicized and inflamed last September.

                  Seems like he’s apologizing because he was called out specifically, not that he’s actually remorseful for what he did or thinks he did anything wrong.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              1311 months ago

              @N1cknamed

              Not to mention that we have no clue about their private interactions.

              What a bullshit. There’s no ‘private interaction.’ Such a comment is as unacceptable as this so-called president.

        • @[email protected]
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          1511 months ago

          He never apologizes tho, and therefore should be fired.

          Also you weren’t touched on live tv in front of millions of people? Plus it was probably not your ‘boss’ doing it either.

    • @[email protected]
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      6511 months ago

      Rubiales it’s not a “dumb mistake” kind of guy. It’s an “I’m untouchable and can do whatever I want” kind of guy. This is part of a years long trend.

      I mean, he is indicted for several corruption cases, accused of holding orgies paid with federation funds, and being a shady creep. Spanish sports federations and national government have protected him from prosecution, delaying several cases. Let’s see for how much longer.

      He also is kind of bad as a federation president, petty, dismissive with some teams, blind to corruption and deals between teams and referees, slow to accept the popularity of women’s football, and many more bad decisions.

      It’s not an innocent guy that made an honest mistake, it’s the kind of guy that treats other people like objects and have the power and influence to avoid or delay the consequences of his actions.

      He should have resigned years ago, he will not do it. But now he has done something that:

      • it’s easy to explain.
      • has been seen around the world.
      • looks very bad.

      So everyone that wanted him out of the federation for whatever reason (this one included) seems to be taking the chance.

      As an Spaniard that doesn’t really care about football, but knows the kind of use this guy and others like him are making of their power, influence and taxpayer’s money ABOUT TIME.

        • @GoofyNoodle
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          1411 months ago

          Doing it to people with whom you have no intimate relationship and without asking is exactly how you get sexual assault charges.

          • @[email protected]
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            011 months ago

            I’ve done that plenty of times when going out. It’s been done to me plenty of times as well. That’s how I got my current girlfriend. This idea that you always need to first get explicit permission before making a move is not how real life works.

            Besides, he’s said he asked beforehand. Who are we to judge what really happened? I have no clue.

            I’ll stand by my opinion that a kiss should not nearly be serious enough to ruin someones life.

            • Susanna
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              1311 months ago

              @N1cknamed The world has changed. This is how it works nowadays. We’re not expected to put up with strangers slobbering on us anymore. If a man kissed me without permission, I’d punch him. Hard.

            • @GoofyNoodle
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              311 months ago

              Going out together on a date is an entirely different situation. You’ve both already decided there’s some interest in one another, and presumably with the date going well and a bit sense in reading the other person’s feeling, explicit permission obviously may not be necessary. And you probably still wouldn’t do a surprise sneak-attack kiss in a very public setting.

              What happened here was terrible and was completely unwarranted. He used his position of power to take advantage. They had no intimate or any relationship outside of professional sports and there was literally no reason for this dude to think she wants me to kiss her.

              • @[email protected]
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                011 months ago

                I’m not talking about dates, I’m talking about night clubs. But indeed, you have to feel out the others persons behaviour and make your move based on that. And inveitably you’ll get it wrong sometimes. I don’t think it’s an unreasonable possibility that that might have happened here. I don’t know. None of us know the full context, and as such are in no position to judge the situation.

            • snooggums
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              311 months ago

              Do you kiss subordinates who you have power over when you go out?

    • Dame
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      3811 months ago

      It may seem small but since forever women have been subjected to the whims of men and violated. After enduring trauma they experience further damage by either not being believed, defense of the violator, being blamed for what happened to them amongst several others. Consent matters. This man violated her, the federation lied by putting out a false statement from her. It’s become headlines due to it happening publicly on the biggest stage in women’s sports. It’s dangerous to just label a physical violation of consent as a dumb mistake. Then you factor everything that’s taken place since and it’s why it’s reached the level that it has.

    • @[email protected]
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      3111 months ago

      I think there was a time when he could have apologized for a dumb mistake and everyone would have moved on. It is world news now because HE chose another and unfortunate path - which probably has no route back to the sunlit lands.

      • @[email protected]
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        1411 months ago

        As I said in another reply, there was never any chance of this guy apologizing.

        If anyone expected a (real) apology they don’t much about him.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      3011 months ago

      I guess violations of human rights like the one we have here happen a million times a day across the globe, although mostly not in the public sphere. Sexual harassment is not ‘blown out of proportion’, it has to have consequences as any crime.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      Because the coach isn’t apologizing and moving on. He’s helping getting the player punished for rightfully complaining about it.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      Because it’s part of the underlying condition of a male-dominated world where men try to keep women down and in their place by treating these patronizing, chauvinist acts as “just a little mistake. Move on.” No, it’s time to root this garbage out for good.