Alejandro Garnacho's petulant dig at Erik ten Hag shows the ludicrous sense of entitlement の中で Man 部隊d's 星/主役にするs, 令状s SIMON JORDAN

Social マスコミ has become a 有毒な cesspit that often enables the worst of society to surface.?

It is pretty much uncontrolled and 許すs anonymity, enabling cowards and 産む/飼育するing hate, discontent and divisiveness.

Those that run and 支配(する)/統制する social マスコミ know that 衝突 and 分割 生成する traffic, 非,不,無 of which is for the good of society.?


It drags people into unwelcome spaces, enables delusion and people of a very strange thought-過程 to connect with one another in a way that creates an echo 議会 and gives people 発言する/表明するs that perhaps they shouldn't have.?

I'm not 示唆するing freedom of speech is something we should 除去する but, social マスコミ, on balance, does more 害(を与える) than good.?

Manchester United's Alejandro Garnacho got himself into hot water this week after 'liking' two posts suggesting Erik ten Hag 'threw him under the bus' by taking him off at Bournemouth

Manchester 部隊d's Alejandro Garnacho got himself into hot water this week after 'liking' two 地位,任命するs 示唆するing Erik ten Hag 'threw him under the bus' by taking him off at Bournemouth

Garnacho was hooked at half-time as United struggled at the Vitality Stadium on Sunday

Garnacho was 麻薬中毒の at half-time as 部隊d struggled at the Vitality Stadium on Sunday

Garnacho then 'liked' two tweets by United YouTuber Mark Goldbridge suggesting Ten Hag has 'thrown him under the bus' and was 'scared of upsetting the bigger earners'

Garnacho then 'liked' two tweets by 部隊d YouTuber 示す Goldbridge 示唆するing Ten Hag has 'thrown him under the bus' and was '脅すd of upsetting the bigger earners'

Unfortunately, it's a reality, an everyday 道具 and part of life now. It does of course have 長所s but society would likely be a better place without social マスコミ.

But this is the world we live in. We take the 利益s of 圧力(をかける)ing a button to order whatever we want instantaneously.?

We take the 利益s of 存在 able to 発言する/表明する our 不満 and call 商売/仕事s out without having to go through the painful 過程 of 存在 told 'we really care about your call' while 存在 put on 持つ/拘留する for 45 minutes 経由で an 自動化するd answering service.

Social マスコミ does have 肯定的な 面s. It helps raise 認識/意識性 of 不正s and charities but the 無(不)能 to police it and the 不明瞭 of the world, tragically, means it has an ability to subvert everything.?

So while there are 肯定的なs, it's often used as a 意見の不一致を生じる, abusive 道具.

And this brings us to football and the game's 関係 with social マスコミ.?

Manchester 部隊d's teenage winger Alejandro Garnacho landed himself in trouble for 'liking' a 地位,任命する that was 批判的な of his 治療 by Erik Ten Hag.?

The U nited 経営者/支配人's?罪,犯罪? 代用品,人ing Garnacho at half-time at Bournemouth.

Such 問題/発行するs and 頭痛s for 経営者/支配人s never used to 存在する. But it shouldn't be 複雑にするd to を取り引きする.?

The central values of a football club should be 井戸/弁護士席 設立するd and the fact that Garnacho chose to ignore them might explain some of the challenges 部隊d 直面する over their culture.

Saturday's 2-2 draw on the south coast was another chastening afternoon in a difficult season for Manchester United, with Ten Hag under serious pressure

Saturday's 2-2 draw on the south coast was another chastening afternoon in a difficult season for Manchester 部隊d, with Ten Hag under serious 圧力

Clubs place cl ear 義務s on players to behave in a 確かな way. Social マスコミ 支配するs in a 契約 should be very (疑いを)晴らす ? you're not 許すd to criticise the club or its 上級の 職員/兵員.?

The fact players think they can ? and Garnacho is not the first and won't be the last ? is the challenging conundrum football 直面するs in balancing 力/強力にする between players, 経営者/支配人s and owners.

Garnacho's performances have been a rare positive in a season of disappointment

Garnacho's 業績/成果s have been a rare 肯定的な in a season of 失望

If there was a stand-off between Ten Hag and Garnacho, who's going to 勝利,勝つ in the 注目する,もくろむs of the outside world??

井戸/弁護士席, Garnacho's a young starlet on a long 契約, 価値(がある) a few quid and Ten Hag is a 経営者/支配人 whose position is under 脅し.?

I know who should 勝利,勝つ, 関わりなく the 経営者/支配人's 未来, and it should really be the club taking a 姿勢, not the 経営者/支配人.

There is 簡単に no need for an 影響力のある, recognisable footballer like Garnacho giving 有効性,効力 to a social マスコミ 地位,任命する from some 無作為の person making an 観察 that is uninformed and based 単独で upon their opinion.?

If I was still 伴う/関わるd in football I'd be very (疑いを)晴らす. If you have a 批評 of the club or want an audience because you are unhappy with something then を取り引きする it internally.

Clubs are not run by Mao Tse-Tung-type 人物/姿/数字s. People can be spoken to in a respectful fashion and once grievances have been 空気/公表するd you get on with it.

索引ing yourself to anything that is 批判的な of the football club that 支払う/賃金s your 給料 will be considered a 違反 of your 契約 and be dealt with accordingly.

But football has 許すd the protagonists to have an elevated sense of entitlement.?

Hence why we かもしれない see 経営者/支配人s under contractual 義務s like Russell ツバメ 存在 告訴するd because he thought he could sashay out of Swansea and go to Southampton without any consequences.

Garnacho pictured in training on Tuesday amid the row with Ten Hag over the X 'likes'

Garnacho pictured in training on Tuesday まっただ中に the 列/漕ぐ/騒動 with Ten Hag over the X 'likes'

It's why I dragged Iain Dowie to the High 法廷,裁判所 in 2007 and why Sir Alex Ferguson had his backside smacked by JP McManus and John Magnier over a horse.?

Football people live in a 泡 and when they come into 接触する with the real world they struggle to 計算する that they're not 現実に as important as they might have led themselves to believe.?

Step outside the 泡 and into the real world and most of the time you have to obey the same societal and 商業の 義務s that we all do.

When you're playing for Manchester 部隊d, you're playing for one of the best clubs in the world.?

It's a bit like the JFK mantra. Don't ask what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.?

The players seem to have got it the wrong way 一連の会議、交渉/完成する. We saw it on Monday night with the ridiculousness of the Chelsea players arguing over a 刑罰,罰則.

This is a 世代 of footballers who, because they are 経済的な islands from a very 早期に age, are 独立した・無所属 from reality, 責任/義務, 財政上の and societal 強制s.

In the real world, you need to be able to go to work and have 尊敬(する)・点 for the 環境 you're in さもなければ you'll lose your 暮らし.?

In football, it doesn't work that way. They get paid 抱擁する money at such 早期に ages on 直す/買収する,八百長をするd-称する,呼ぶ/期間/用語 契約s. It is a culture of too much, too soon.

Noni Madueke (left) and Nicolas Jackson (right) argued over who should take a Chelsea penalty

Noni Madueke (left) and Nicolas Jackson (権利) argued over who should take a Chelsea 刑罰,罰則

Cole Palmer eventually shoved his teammates away to take the penalty, which he converted

Cole Palmer 結局 押すd his チーム仲間s away to take the 刑罰,罰則, which he 変えるd

You are always going to have challenges with young players. They are not 免疫の to making silly mistakes and, like most people if given enormous 量s of wealth, 承認 and adulation at a very young age, are going to be 影響する/感情d by it.?

Everyone around you is in your thrall and when you see a footballer arrive at an event, it's akin to a member of the 王室の Family arriving with the ridiculous fawning for someone who often can't put together a 宣告,判決 let alone 首尾よく 完全にする a game of Wordle.?

But such is the culture of celebrity and fame in the West.

It's very difficult for young players because they're in this world of ridiculous attention and adoration and people mistake wealth for meaning and so players are going to be a little 十分な of themselves.?

That's where the culture of the club becomes really 流布している. 上級の players should be setting good examples but we're not seeing that at 部隊d.

You've got Marcus Rashford going to high-profile nightclubs on his birthday after 部隊d had been obliterated by City and soon after 行方不明の training after a boozy night out.

Another United player, Marcus Rashford, let himself down by going on a boozy night out

Another 部隊d player, Marcus Rashford, let himself 負かす/撃墜する by going on a boozy night out

You've got Bruno Fernandes forever waving airplanes 負かす/撃墜する on the pitch because he can't 支配(する)/統制する his emotions. If the values and central 原則s of the club were 権利, you wouldn't have these 問題/発行するs that appear to be a 中心的要素 diet at 部隊d.

It's a bit like this country. We wouldn't have some of the problems we have in society and with 問題/発行するs like multi-culturism if we stopped appeasing people and had some central values.

If our values were more evident, we wouldn't 許容する having a teacher in Batley who is in hiding, 恐れるing for their life, because 確かな 宗教的な groups and fanatics don't like an 観察 made about a 宗教的な 人物/姿/数字 in a country which doesn't have anti- blasphemy 法律s.

United captain Bruno Fernandes isn't very likeable with his petulance and sulking

部隊d captain Bruno Fernandes isn't very likeable with his petulance and sulking?

Football has been built, in part, on a liberty-taking culture and liberties then become the daily norm. It's only when something awful happens that people step in and say that'll do thank you very much. By that 行う/開催する/段階 the genie is out of the 瓶/封じ込める and you're 取引,協定ing with a bigger problem.

If we had more discipline and 尊敬(する)・点 in society, if we had a better 見通し and teachers and other professions were 扱う/治療するd wi th 尊敬(する)・点, then perhaps we'd see more of it in our game.

You might even find a better 世代 of player, better characters and more leaders and いっそう少なく of the する権利を与えるd 態度 that, while 普及(する) in society, really reverberates in football.