The summary is:
The text is a transcript of a segment from the show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, where he criticizes FIFA and Qatar for the human rights violations and corruption involved in hosting the 2022 World Cup. He exposes the harsh working and living conditions of migrant workers who built the stadiums and infrastructure, the oppression of women and LGBT people in Qatar, and the hypocrisy of FIFA and Qatar officials who claim to promote peace and unity through the tournament. He also mocks FIFA's former president Sepp Blatter, Qatar's World Cup mascot Laib, and David Beckham's promotional videos for Qatar. He acknowledges that he will watch the World Cup despite the controversies, but urges FIFA to do better in the future and not award the event to countries with poor human rights records.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The text is a transcript of a segment from the show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, where he talks about the Qatar World Cup and its human rights issues.
2. Qatar won the bid to host the World Cup in 2010, despite being an unsuitable and dangerous place for a summer soccer tournament, with allegations of bribery and corruption.
3. Qatar recruited hundreds of thousands of migrant workers, mainly from India, Nepal and Bangladesh, to build the infrastructure for the World Cup, but subjected them to a system of modern-day slavery known as kafala, where they had no rights, no freedom and no protection.
4. Thousands of migrant workers died in Qatar from 2010 to 2020, mostly due to harsh working and living conditions, but the Qatari government only acknowledged 37 deaths among laborers at World Cup stadiums and attributed most of them to natural causes or cardiac arrest.
5. Qatar also has a poor record of human rights for women and LGBT people, who face discrimination, oppression and criminalization under its laws.
6. FIFA, the organization behind the World Cup, has been complicit in Qatar's abuses and has praised its labor reforms, which are insufficient and late. FIFA also has a history of favoring authoritarian regimes as hosts for its tournaments.
7. The segment urges viewers not to ignore or forget the atrocities that underlie the Qatar World Cup, and hopes that some of the players and fans can speak out and pressure FIFA to do better in the future.