It's great to see r/nfl lose their collective shit over one of the all-time greatest QBs in NFL history question the vax on scientific basis and even mention Ivermectin.
This has more attention than WR Cole Beasley given Aaron Rodgers' stature. Normies spinning overtime in their hamster wheels on this news cycle, trying to rationalize the scamdemic and demonize Rodgers.
A few things that I can think of is that the team is owned by its fans rather than a single wealthy owner. They probably also deliberately pick for those sort of players. Remember that their last big time QB was Jordy Nelson, who is from a small town in Kansas and was the son of farmers, and during the off season he would work on his families farm. I should know, that is my chunk of the state, and everyone around here are Packers fans because of it (unless we are cheering on the Chiefs).
Ah. I am not big on football. I just know Packers because my aunt is a hyper fan (to the point that she is a shareholder). And, like I said, everyone in Northeast Kansas knows and loves Jordy.
I basically agree but not with the language "Health Should Not Be Political".
The only way we're fighting this is by making it political. In Canada and Australia health is not political - EVERYONE in power agrees your freedom is less important than the state's authority to dictate public health.
It's great to see r/nfl lose their collective shit over one of the all-time greatest QBs in NFL history question the vax on scientific basis and even mention Ivermectin.
This has more attention than WR Cole Beasley given Aaron Rodgers' stature. Normies spinning overtime in their hamster wheels on this news cycle, trying to rationalize the scamdemic and demonize Rodgers.
What is it about Green Bay that makes their QBs grounded, normal people? Is it simply that it's a small-ish city populated by normal people?
A few things that I can think of is that the team is owned by its fans rather than a single wealthy owner. They probably also deliberately pick for those sort of players. Remember that their last big time QB was Jordy Nelson, who is from a small town in Kansas and was the son of farmers, and during the off season he would work on his families farm. I should know, that is my chunk of the state, and everyone around here are Packers fans because of it (unless we are cheering on the Chiefs).
Jordy was a wide receiver. Their last quarterback was Brett Favre, pronounced "Farve".
Ah. I am not big on football. I just know Packers because my aunt is a hyper fan (to the point that she is a shareholder). And, like I said, everyone in Northeast Kansas knows and loves Jordy.
I'm other words, White Supremacy at work.
I basically agree but not with the language "Health Should Not Be Political".
The only way we're fighting this is by making it political. In Canada and Australia health is not political - EVERYONE in power agrees your freedom is less important than the state's authority to dictate public health.