At a small environmental forum in Vancouver, the famous Canadian scientist David Suzuki decides to speak directly to two of the most recognizable football stars in the world: Cristiano Ronaldo and Luka Modriฤ.
Suzuki adjusts his glasses and smiles.
โGentlemen,โ Suzuki begins, โyou are two of the most talented footballers on Earth. But I want to ask you something important.โ
He points toward the green mountains around Vancouver.
โAre you friends of the environment?โ
Ronaldo and Modriฤ exchange a look.
Suzuki continues:
โYou could make a real statement. Forget the big money leagues for a moment. Come play football here in Vancouver โ the worldโs greenest city. Imagine the message it would send if global superstars chose clean air, forests, and community over another mansion.โ
He turns directly to Ronaldo.
โCristiano, I see the headlines about the cars, the garages, the luxury. But let me ask you something: are you working for your cars?โ
The room laughs softly.
โBecause from where I stand,โ Suzuki says, โit looks like the cars are winning.โ
He gestures with his hands like heโs planting something in the soil.
โSaving the world isnโt glamorous. Itโs not champagne parties or red carpets. Itโs gardening. Itโs recycling. Itโs composting your food scraps. Itโs living in a smaller home and riding a bicycle sometimes.โ
Suzuki shrugs with a calm smile.
โSimplify, man. The Earth doesnโt need more power consumers. It needs role models.โ
Then he nods toward the soccer stars again.
โYou two could score the most important goal of your lives โ not in Madrid or Riyadh โ but for the planet.โ
โAnd the training,โ Suzuki adds with a grin, โstarts in the garden.โ ๐ฑโฝ๐









Joe leans back, arms crossed, giving a slow nod.
โYeahโฆ simplify, man,โ he echoes, letting the words hang in the air.
He glances at Ronaldoโs shiny car collection and then at the lush Vancouver skyline.
โForget all that flashy stuff. Play for the planet, not the power. Grow some rootsโliterally. Plant a tree, ride a bike, compost your scraps. Thatโs the real championship,โ Joe adds, his tone calm but cutting.
The message is clear: fame and money donโt score points in the game of saving the world. Only action does. ๐ฑโฝ
David Suzuki leans forward, voice steady but serious, his gaze sweeping the room.
โListen,โ he says, โthe Bible isnโt just ancient poetry. Revelation 16 โ itโs a warning. A warning about floods, plagues, and devastation. Itโs a cautionary tale about the mass extinction that is happening right now because of human greed and neglect.โ
He points to the forests and waters outside the window.
โWe are living that warning. Species vanish, ecosystems collapse, and yet we cling to mansions, ten-car garages, and endless consumption. If we donโt simplify โ if we donโt act โ weโre reading the prophecy in real time.โ
Then he fixes Ronaldo and Modriฤ with a piercing look.
โThis isnโt about religion. Itโs about survival. The world needs your influence, not your luxury. Play for life, not for money.โ ๐๐