@_CATNERD2@Mignonne21@HawleyMO@MLB Now, in my scenario; I'm me, dinner is baseball, and MLB is my family
I have the option to not go to my family dinner and I have the option to not watch baseball. But I enjoy dinner with my family and baseball, but I despise praying and the pride imagery. I'm forced to endure it
@_CATNERD2@Mignonne21@HawleyMO@MLB Let me put it this way: I'm an atheist (yes, really). If I'm invited to a dinner by my family, I'll gladly accept. They always choose to pray before dinner. I don't like it, but I go through the motions. They know I don't like it, but they do it anyway. They are forcing it on me.
@_CATNERD2@Mignonne21@HawleyMO@MLB If they had Christian month, it absolutely would be forced on the fanbase. Players can wear crosses if they want--it's their prerogative. Players can wear rainbow wristbands if they want, if they support that, but for the organization to outright back the ideology, it's wrong.
@_CATNERD2@Mignonne21@HawleyMO@MLB It's woke ideology that is an unwelcome addition to a sport where neutrality should be the standard. Just like there should not be Christian month, Jewish month, Heterosexual days, and Black Lives Matter patches. None of if belongs in sport. To say otherwise is political.
@uSTADIUM Invite every available kicker on the market to tryouts. Ask them to kick 100 field goals from 50+ yards. Sign the one that hits the most. Jets. Only halfway kidding.