Any sports analyst or commentator in any sport regardless of their level of experience or knowledge that uses the phrase 'x team/player just wanted it more' should instantly be fired...into the sun.
@ContraPoints She is smart, but the reason that conversation didn't go well is because she's also dishonest. I don't think conversations with people like this are productive unless you're willing to correct a bunch of their false claims more assertively. Otherwise you just become a pawn.
@RichBelmont1234@604RAW After Russia's invasion of Ukraine the UFC banned flags of all countries but eventually reversed that decision so I'm not sure why this was taken away with him. Fighters are supposed to be allowed to have them during the walkout and post fight.
@Boldiful@TheLegalMindset@kick Kick is likely protected under section 230 of the communications act. Online platforms are not treated as the 'publisher' but rather the person/org who made the post/broadcast/upload is.
@42frz @Vitamin71017090@Hiastrax In the US you have strong 1st amendment rights and burden for a defamation cases is a lot higher for public figures than it is for a private citizen. The case with vitaly is very different in nature than someone accusing the president of something.
@42frz @Hiastrax Not if you then broadcast somewhere. This is defamation per se, especially if the person not a public figure. You don't even have to prove actual malice in that case, just negligence. Your 1st amendment rights wouldn't protect you in a case this like and the damages are assumed.
@WOnTheSpot@JLee2028@barstoolsports He was born in Australia which does have good record keeping so your first 2 points are irrelevant and it takes literally 2 seconds of googling to find that out.
@paleochristcon To add some context, NSE does say you were very polite during all your interactions irl with her and she never felt in danger around you.