Americans call the game "soccer." The rest of the world calls it "football."
Once again, American exceptionalism exposes the soft belly underneath the rhetoric. America wants to define the terms without having mastered the basic concepts.
America's national team in the 2026 World Cup showed - as it does, like clockwork, every four years - that the United States is entirely uncompetitive in the world's favorite sport. America talks a good game... or, rather, the blathering idiots like Carly Lloyd, Alexi Lalas, and Landon Donovan talk up the team like its the second coming of the Light Brigade, praising U.S. players as if they are on a par with the likes of Mbape, Renaldo, or Messi. The first clue to the myth-making is that no American player is recognized by one name, like the greats from France, Portugal, or Argentina. No, America is at best second rate when it comes to the world of football, but fans and TV talking heads can't help gushing over what turn out to be just ordinary exploits.
Every four years, Americans get to hear the same, tired nonsense, about how far America has come in terms of competitiveness at the World Cup, how this team or these players comprise a growing, emerging explosion of football greatness from sea to shining sea. It's always the same: the U.S. team can't even make the quarterfinals and are usually embarrassed in the earlier rounds by European squads which know how to play the game and win games.
This year's fiasco was none different from past failures. In the Group Stage, hopes were raised that the USA had finally arrived, beating Paraguay, Australia, and Turkey to qualify for the knockout rounds. Announcers were all too eager to call this team "one of the best ever," and a "basis for the future." What they failed to observe was that the United States beat up some very second-rate or third-rate teams in their easy grouping. None of the teams in the group, including the United States, has ever won a World Cup championship. So, with attendant sound and fury, the United States team sailed into the Round of 32 and defeat an infant team from Bosnia-Herzegovina, 2-nil. The whoops and chants of USA-USA-USA grew louder, but the real test was yet to come, when the U.S. faced Belgium in the Round of 16.
The 4-1 loss to Belgium completed the story. The United States was completely outclassed by the Belgian nationals, many of whose players are veterans of various European leagues. Further, Belgium takes its football quite seriously. After a third place finish in the 2018 World Cup, Belgium was ousted in Group play in 2022, and a concerted effort was made to improve off that disappointment with better players, smarter coaches, and strategic thinking. They absolutely schooled their American counterparts in a completely one-sided, 4-1, rout.
Despite the continuous chorus of America's team's emergence into the elite of the football world, what fans everywhere saw was a team that lacked any kind of defensive cohesion, giving up two early goals that most teams would have easily defended. The third goal, off a grievous error by U.S. goalkeeper, Matt Freese, was the ultimate embarrassment and put the game completely out of reach. The United States failed to generate any good scoring chances, their lone goal coming on a fortunate ball on a free kick. Other than that, they were flat, outplayed, and out-coached. The United States was the only team - out of 32 - in the knockout stage to allow four goals, which brings us to the meat of the matter...
Americans, especially these days, with a loudmouth braggart occupying the White House, consider themselves to be superior to the rest of the world and routinely announce such to anybody within earshot. Of course, Americans with IQs above room temperature understand that all the posturing and posing by the USA in any field, be it mathematics, industry, snowboarding, or anything else, is usually unwarranted and the World Cup fiasco is the perfect metaphor for all of the meaningless, loud-mouthed spoutng of platitudes, greatness, and world dominance.
The United States doesn't dominate in anything other than bragging and blowing up people and countries that don't agree with its obviously-flawed rationale for why others should bend the knee to the American Empire. Just like the World Cup football team, the United States is second rate in everything when compared to other leading countries of the world, China and Russia, especially. Over the past 60 or so years, the United States has been reduced from being a shining, productive, innovative nation to one which has ignored the needs of its citizens, failed to upgrade infrastructure, and has brought new meaning to the term "wealth disparity."
The country may lead in some rare categories. U.S. politicians rank as some of the most corrupt. The United States also is very-highly ranked for putting narratives before reality. The press corps in the United States is among the global leaders in propaganda, spewing half-truths and outright lies on a regular basis.
There's a lesson or two to be learned from the World Cup experience but Ameircans are unlikely to learn them, being too pre-occupied with the latest celebrity romance or corporate scandal. Greatness cannot be achieved by talking about it. Greatness is earned by accomplishment. Advancing to the quarterfinals of the next World Cup would be a giant step in the right direction, but America won't likely make the commitment to improve nor put the right people in the right places. The entire structure of USA "football" will be dominated by failures and opportunists, quick buck artists, and lazy thinkers.
Just like America's military escapades in Ukraine and the Middle East, the World Cup experience exposes the United States as what they refer to in Texas as, "big hat, no cattle."
Because the stock market is at or near all-time highs does not imply value. Men of riches and material wealth are not necessarily wise. America talks a good game, but, when it comes down to proving, it fails to deliver.
Thanks for listening. In the hallowed words of Chris Martenson, "it doesn't have to be this way."
At the Close, Wednesday, July 8, 2026:
Dow: 52,348.39, -576.76 (-1.09%)
NASDAQ: 25,870.65, +51.96 (+0.20%)
S&P 500: 7,482.71, -21.14 (-0.28%)
NYSE Composite: 23,790.61, -226.35 (-0.94%)
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