Protest at Laker Game Monday
The Illegal Alien Supporters are going to Protest Phil Jackson at the Laker game Monday. I mention this because John and Ken talked about it and they are going to try to have a reporter there. So you live in LA and you can go by and support Arizona, you might get an interview on KFI.
http://orangejuiceblog.com/2010/05/p...ter-on-may-17/ |
Thanks for the info, but I say out of LA. I don't even want to use my gas in that town.
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These protesters are making fools of themselves. |
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They have been making fools of them selves for years, that is all they know. |
They will do more stupid stuff and wake up a million more Americans!
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That's hilarious. Phil Jackson. Somehow I don't get the impression he's a charter member of the John Birch Society or someone the GOP is exactly counting on for campaign contributions. They're getting desperate. They're running out of complaints to make. |
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Really. . . seriously. . . you're giving way too much credit to the fringe. http://www.ajc.com/multimedia/dynami...ba_595945l.jpg |
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I'm not a sports fan of any sorts. Today most are a cross between the Olympics and Roman sacrifice. |
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I'll go even further and say that professional sports are fake competition, just like big time wrestling. It's all sucked up in chasing records, boosting ratings and selling crap. Have you ever seen Little League Baseball? It's an expensive kiddie parade where the first job is to dignify the conspicuous consumption of professional sports. The tiny little uniforms, the immaculate fields perfectly scaled down and all the technical adornments, it's all pretty weird. Somewhere the kids are supposed to be having fun, but the adults are the ones showing the most excitement. |
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As far as "gangs identifying", sports rivalry has been around forever, like politics 'rivalry'. But saying "I believe what is being pointed to is the reconquestas are protesting because they want all sports to become involved in their reconquest. is just nutty to me, and it won't happen. These gangs hardly raise a blip on the radar of national and world sports. |
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Dude, you need to get some air. . . |
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Years ago I read Frederick Douglass' autobiography and he recounted how the slave owners would give slaves time off over the Xmas holidays and provided ulimited liquor and tried to keep them involved in physical things such as running, wrestling and fighting each other. Douglass said it was considered a disgrace not to be drunk and slaves who made productive use of their leisure time were frowned upon by the master.
He also said, "A slave who was drunk gave no thought of liberty or escape to the north. It was the sober thoughtful slave who was a threat to the master's security." This hit me like a thunderclap! It dawned on me that most people I know spend their holidays watching athetic events on TV while they sit on their couch drugging themselves with alocohol. I have never found a single redeeming thing about professional athletics. They only originated in the late 1800's and have not been much of a blessing for our civilization. |
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The other side of rivalry is comradery. |
Here's the article;
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Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articl...#ixzz0oEKRfWyH |
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Right on, Phil Jackson! I really hope the Lakers kick the asses of those Hispandering "Los Suns". A Laker sweep would be some great poetic justice!
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It was a whole lot of not much at Staples Center just before the game. The open borders loons had to behave b/c there were cops all over the place, and more significantly, they were sort of competing for attention with the Born Again Christians who had superior numbers, larger signs, and were attempting to encroach on their territory.
All in all, I was pretty underwhelmed. No accusations of racism. No hollering that this is occupied Mexican territory. Not even so much as a whisper of gratuitous profanity. What the hell is this world coming to? VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cq4NI5LabTo |
Thanks for the video of the clowns. I was worried about the Lakers because Phil said Kobe did not practice all week. I guess Kobe knows his body better than any one else.
GO LAKERS AND THANK YOU LAKER ORG. FOR STAYING OUT OF THE POLITICS. |
The open borders crowd was uncharacteristically well-mannered.
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Here's an example of the open-mindedness of the Phoenix Suns' staff (excerpted):
Freedom of Expression? Not if it's about Illegal Immigration By Bobby Eberle May 18, 2010 7:13 AM As a show of opposition to the Arizona law, the owner of the Phoenix Suns professional basketball team had his team don "Los Suns" jerseys for a playoff game. The move garnered national media attention. But Phoenix Suns fan Jim Clark had a different idea. During Game 2 of the playoffs between the Suns and the San Antonio Spurs, Clark wore an orange shirt which read, "Viva Los 1070." What was the result? He was kicked out of the game by Suns' security! As noted in The Daily Caller, Clark and a friend "were ejected from their first row seats and removed from the arena last week after refusing orders from security guards to take off their shirts in support of Arizona's recently passed law against illegal immigration." This is not the first occurrence of politics creeping into the Suns basketball games: On Cinco de Mayo, team owner Robert Sarver came up with the idea for the team to wear "Los Suns" on their jerseys in protest of the immigration law. That's what drove Clark to don his own shirt. "If they're going to shove their politics down my throat, I'm going make a message of my own," Clark told The Daily Caller. Phoenix's ABC affiliate web site, quoted Clark as saying, "I didn't go there (game) to hear about politics, I went there to be entertained." Soon after the game started, according to Clark, he was approached by security at US Airways Center. "They (security) looked like secret service talking on their microphones, then they told me I either had to take off the shirt, turn it inside out or leave, so they decided to throw us out," said Clark. Clark said he and a friend argued with members of the security staff outside the building and were eventually allowed to return to their seats. The best comment to come from Clark was his correlation between what the security officials were doing and what the Arizona law is supposed to do: "The irony of the whole thing is, they (security) wanted to see our tickets, they wanted to see our papers, they wanted to see if everything was in order with us," said Clark. This will likely not be the end of the story. Clark told The Daily Caller that he has printed 500 similar shirts with more on the way. So... an Arizona mans stands up and supports a law which is designed to crack down on illegal activity and enforce immigration laws, and he is the bad guy? I guess freedom of expression comes with a great big asterisk next to it. It only applies if you speak out against America and the American way of life. http://www.gopusa.com/theloft/2010/0...mmigration.php |
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