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Sports Title: ‘Goodbye Pittsburgh Steelers, Burn In Hell’: Angry Fans Burn Gear Over National Anthem Protest PITTSBURGH (KDKA) Pittsburgh Steelers fans are taking to social media to show how upset they are that the team stayed inside during the national anthem. Fans have posted numerous videos on social media of themselves burning their Steelers gear. Im a lifelong Steelers fan, not anymore. Not a fan of you, the NFL, any of it, says Jim Heaney on YouTube. Heaney posted the video of himself setting all of his Steelers gear on fire following the teams decision to decide to stay inside the locker room/tunnel during the national anthem. And I hope all your ignorance burns too, Heaney says as he throws his Steelers gear on the fire. Heaney ends his video by saying, there you go, goodbye Pittsburgh Steelers, burn in hell, Semper Fi. In another video posted to YouTube, Robert Williams of Texas posted a video of himself burning hundreds of dollars in Steelers gear. We have morals in this country. We stand for this country. My great uncles bones are lying in the bottom of Pearl Harbor. For this country, for the flag, for your freedom to play in the NFL and to say whatever you want to say. But you do not disrespect the flag and the country and the Constitution. So watch this stuff burn, Williams says. Starving1 (@ArvinGibbs) September 24, 2017 In a video posted to Twitter, and shared more than 15,000 times, Arvin Gibbs is seen on video burning a Steelers sweatshirt and hat, while holding an American flag. Super Bowl right? As if I care, what I care about is this country, what I care about is freedom, and its all about those stars and stripes, Williams says. Never again will waste one minute of my life following the NFL or the Pittsburgh Steelers, another YouTube video user says. I am no longer am a Steelers fan or of anyone that will not stand for our anthem no matter your political views or color of your skin. I hope your sport goes up in flames like my shirt did, says Christos Kallas. Today after 30 years of loving the Pittsburgh Steelers Im going burn my Steelers jersey . They have taken a great American sport that people use to forget there problems with and turned it into a political circus that disrespects our Country and our Military that gave there lives for your freedom, posted YouTube user Michael Hesson. The protest was also the main topic of discussion on 93-7 The Fan Monday morning. They announced that the Steelers previously werent going to come on the field for the national anthem. When they came on the field, the whole bar booed, the whole single bar, said one caller. I actually got up and left I was so upset. Head coach Mike Tomlin, who stood on the sideline without his team, said the team made the decision during a meeting on Saturday. Lisa Washingtons Report: Some fans believe the Steelers organization will suffer because of the action. I dont think the Steelers are going take a long-term hit, said another caller. I think it will be temporary hit, maybe the next couple of games. I think people will talk about it, but if they start winning, if they start producing, it will blow over, because as we know in this country, winning cures all. Some fans said they supported Alejandro Villanueva, Steelers offensive tackle and a former U.S. Army Ranger. He stood near the tunnel Sunday during the National Anthem, with his hand over his heart. His teammates stood behind him. Al Villanueva, he knows the real meaning of teamwork because he led men in combat, said one caller. Hes probably saying to himself, what am I doing with this group of people? . . . Poster Comment: At least one famous Steelers fan is swearing off the team: Rush Limbaugh, a huge Steelers fan for decades. The mystique is gone. That actually started vanishing a while ago. The larger-than-life aspect of it is gone. The belief, the wish, the desire that the people in the game were the best and brightest and special, and thats why they were there, thats gone. And its been politicized. It has been politicized and corrupted, and it didnt start this weekend. It started years ago. And if I wanted to, I could go back and get the transcripts from a few years ago on this program where I first sensed that this was happening and was going to happen. Of course, years ago I couldnt predict this specific event, but my sadness actually began years ago when all of the attention focused on the danger and the supposed attempt to hide all of that, not specifically just the concussions. The whole aura that that created. The sports media began to criticize that which they report on. It just became politicized. It simply just became politicized. And the people politicizing it, since were talking about politics, the people that politicized it are people on the left. And when that happens, things change. Its just over. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 5.
#5. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Public relations expertise has never been a requirement to play pro-football before this year! They tried to handle a sensitive public situation wisely but muffed it up. How surprising is that? They're football players, not politicians!
#7. To: Pinguinite, nolu chan (#5)
Does the public even have a clear idea of what they're protesting? I don't. It could be several things. Who knows what they're really protesting at this point? I'm not sure even they know. But they're definitely going to take it out on that darned anthem and flag. 'Cause that'll show Whitey.
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