I said we gay today

I said we same-sex attracted today Meme Generator

What is the Meme Generator?

It's a free online image maker that lets you add custom resizable text, images, and much more to templates. People often use the generator to customize established memes, such as those found in Imgflip's collection of Meme Templates. However, you can also upload your hold templates or initiate from scratch with empty templates.

How to make a meme

  1. Choose a template. You can use one of the well-liked templates, search through more than 1 million user-uploaded templates using the hunt input, or smash "Upload new template" to upload your own template from your device or from a url. For designing from scratch, try searching "empty" or "blank" templates.
  2. Add customizations. Add text, images, stickers, drawings, and spacing using the buttons beside your meme canvas.
  3. Create and share. Hit "Generate Meme" and then choose how to share and keep your meme. You can share to social apps or through your cell, or share a link, or download to your device. You can also share with one of Imgflip's many meme communities.

How can I customize my meme?

  • You can step and resize the text boxes by dr

    David Naimon: Today’s episode is made doable by Northwestern University Press and their new release, Minuscule Armageddon by poet, Gregory Fraser. Small Armageddon describes everyday explorations—the small explosions within life, family, and “ordinary survival.” Fraser writes at eye level, detailing the experiences of fatherhood, love, and the quiet of daily life calm at the brink of abrupt upheaval. These poems even out imagination and truth-telling with a loaded verse that brings the reader’s ear closer to the quiet and how intense it truly is. Listeners of Between the Covers receive a 20% discount on Minuscule Armageddon or any other Northwestern University Press title with promo code POD20. This offer is available at nupress.northwestern.edu. Today’s episode is also brought to you by Forsyth Harmon’s Justine, a debut illustrated novel that offers a sharp, intimate portrayal of girlhood on the edge of adulthood, and the thin line between friendship and obsession. Hailed as “showstopping” by Alexander Chee, “urgent and exquisite” by Melissa Febos, “an unsettling, adoring, insightful, and even a little frightening” by Victor LaValle, the novel chronicles L

    'I feel gay, I experience disabled': FIFA chief raises eyebrows with speech against Qatar critics

    Key Points
    • FIFA president Gianni Infantino has accused critics of World Cup host Qatar's human rights record of "hypocrisy".
    • He also said he identified with marginalised groups.
    • Mr Infantino's remarks sparked backlash from human rights advocates.

    FIFA president Gianni Infantino accused critics of World Cup host Qatar's treatment of migrant workers of hypocrisy on Saturday, adding that engagement was the only way to improve human rights.

    In lengthy, and sometimes angry, opening remarks at a news conference on the eve of the start of the tournament, Mr Infantino rounded on European critics of the host nation over the issues of migrant workers and LGBTIQ+ rights.

    "Today I feel Qatari. Today I feel Arab. Today I feel African. Today I feel homosexual. Today I feel disabled. Today I feel (like) a vagrant. Today I feel (like) a migrant worker," he said.

    "I sense all of this because what I see ... brings me back to my personal story."

    Mr Infantino then detailed how he had grown up as the child of migrant workers in Switzerland and

    FIFA President Gianni Infantino has been criticized online after remarks on Saturday defending the hosting of the World Cup in Qatar.

    During a press conference in Doha, Infantino addressed the recent criticism of Qatar's stance on the LGBTQ community as well as the country's treatment of migrant workers.

    "Today I feel Qatari. Today I feel Arabic. Today I feel African. Today I undergo gay. Today I feel disabled. Today I feel [like] a migrant worker," Infantino said.

    In an apparent effort to show solidarity with marginalized groups, he added, "I am the son of migrant workers. My parents were working very, very hard, in very, very difficult conditions. Not in Qatar - Switzerland."

    In a slightly more defensive tone, he also said: "We have been told many, many lessons from some Europeans, from the western world. I think for what we Europeans have been doing the last 3,000 years we should be apologizing for next 3,000 years before starting to give moral lessons to people."

    Bryan Swanson, FIFA Director of Media Relations, also told the squeeze conference: "I am sitting here as a gay man in Qatar. We have received assurances that everyone will be welcome and I believe everyone will be."