In a moment pregnant with ominous overtones, anthem protester and left-wing activist soccer player Megan Rapinoe cast a shadow of doubt on the very existence of God, questioning the divine plan after a three-minute plunge into despair during her final professional soccer game.
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Sitting through her post-game press conference, her pained attempts at a smile betrayed the agony she felt. Rapinoe, a vocal critic of Trump and a trans activist, expressed her lamentations, stating, “I mean, I don’t deserve this, I’ll tell you that much.” In an unsettling twist, she continued, “I’m not a religious person or anything, but if there is a God, this is proof that there isn’t.”
As reported by Aol.com, Rapinoe’s illustrious soccer career boasts a trove of accolades, including two World Cups, an Olympic gold medal, the Golden Ball, and Golden Boot in the 2019 World Cup. Yet, the absence of an NWSL title had eluded her. When she was basking in the glory of success, meeting heads of state, and enjoying the pinnacle of fame and fortune in her sport, the notion of God’s existence eluded her. However, a late-career injury has become, in her eyes, irrefutable proof of the Almighty’s absence.
In a surreal turn of logic, Rapinoe seems to suggest that the divine is more concerned with her personal misfortune than the myriad victories and privileges she enjoyed throughout her storied career. It’s a perspective that, on the surface, appears to contradict the very principles she and her leftist cohorts claim to detest: privilege. Despite her unprecedented success in soccer and the adulation heaped upon her by the left, Rapinoe, in the face of an unfortunate twist of fate, questions, “I don’t deserve this?”
The irony is palpable – a privileged individual, blessed with a career unrivaled in soccer history, crying foul when faced with adversity. Rapinoe’s team, the OL Reign, suffered a defeat in the championship game against NJ/NY Gotham FC, further cementing, in her eyes, the belief that God’s absence is proven by the outcome. The echoes of concern and impending doom pervade her narrative, challenging the very foundations of her worldview.