Shocker: NFL Ratings Tank (Politics and Greed are ruining America's Game)

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over kill too was one of the reason i turn it off.come on guys 1pm eastern kickoff on sunday until what 12 or 1 am, come on guys.and all the night game thur, sunday, it total taken away from the speical monday night games yrs ago.when abc lost the monday night game, it kill it.it use to be we talk in real life and forums all monday about the game.now it just another game......damn what a great fun sport yrs ago it now just a shell of it this is one sport that big money totally kill it
and if you dont think the nfl is not a cult now, you are not watching what going on
 

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even in the offseason, if you can call the nfl offseason the talking heads talk about it everyday in the media to kept it on the brain as the greatest thing since the wheel was invented, again this borders on a cult
 

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i think nicotine where you got to have a cig and the media hype on the brain everyday on the nfl is a little in a way very close
 

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even in the offseason, if you can call the nfl offseason the talking heads talk about it everyday in the media to kept it on the brain as the greatest thing since the wheel was invented, again this borders on a cult

And we all notice on here you can't stop taking about the NFL - talking about how other people can't stop talking about it. We heard you the first hundred posts Dude.
 

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i was just trying to help others in a way to get they lives back from this sport...in a way it like a drug to many
 

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NFL players now taking their protests onto the field

By Anthony Barstow

September 17, 2017 | 6:59pm

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The NFL would prefer the players’ now-ubiquitous protests take a back seat to the action this season, but it looks like the league won’t get its wish.

If anything, the players seem ready to take their social critique beyond sitting during the national anthem.

Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett, who is among the ranks of NFL players to sit during the anthem, celebrated a sack Sunday afternoon with a single raised fist.
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Bennett was the first Seattle player announced during pregame introductions before the home opener against the 49ers and received one of the loudest ovations.

Then he took what’s become his usual seat on the bench during the national anthem.

Protesters supporting Bennett, who says he was subjected to racial profiling and excessive force when Las Vegas police detained him last month, gathered outside the stadium.

Seattle center Justin Britt and running back Thomas Rawls stood next to Bennett, each with a hand on his shoulder, during the anthem. Teammates Cliff Avril and Frank Clark also sat with Bennett for the final moments of the anthem.

Out-of-work quarterback Colin Kaepernick generally is credited with starting the trend of kneeling or sitting during the national anthem in protest of police treatment of black citizens in the US.

Kaepernick’s movement, which many believe has cost him a job, has grown this season, with offshoots of the protest forming, including players showing solidarity by putting their hands on each other’s backs during the anthem.

Bennett’s raised fist, however, is the first instance of a player seeming to protest during a game.

While the NFL battles declining ratings and a negative perception surrounding the anthem protests, the league office can’t be excited to see players moving their demonstrations to the field of play.

With AP

 

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These idiots are going to "protest" themselves out of a job and back to the ghetto.
 

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