00:00Where to draw the line, that's the question that I ask.
00:02I didn't know that in the office of FIFA,
00:04the 5th of July was the 1st of April in Europe.
00:07I think it comes down to FIFA and Infantino not being corrupt.
00:11Bad, bad, bad, bad, bad decision.
00:28I think it was unfair red, and I think a lot of football insiders have kind of agreed with that.
00:36But once you give a red, it's a red.
00:37Everyone that really loves that sport and trusts on the ethics and integrity,
00:48you know, I think we celebrate all that decision.
00:59I think it's more of an Infantino problem than it is a Trump problem.
01:03I think fair by Trump for, you know, trying to help out the US,
01:07trying to do whatever he can and, like, organizing, I think, as a lawyer team.
01:10She defends her integrity, she defends her ethics.
01:14From memory, I think it's the first time in the history of the World Cup
01:17that there is this kind of decision.
01:29What about the next red card?
01:31What happens then?
01:32Is there going to be some committee somewhere that is going to take that card away?
01:42Do we think it's not a red card?
01:44Or who thinks it?
01:45Where does it start and where does it end?
01:47It's my question.
01:48I don't have an answer.
01:49Could Harry maybe ask Donald Trump to?
01:52Maybe.
01:53Maybe, yeah.
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