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Can someone explain the Josh Allen hate from Bomani Jones and Dominique Foxworth??


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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Why not say he doesn't like "proud boy" type football fans?  What evidence does he have that these types support Josh Allen or are more predominant in Bills Mafia more than any other football team or QB?  Does he think there aren't "proud boy" NE Patriot fans or Atlanta Falcons Fans or Carolina Panthers fans or wherever? 

 

Then take it a step further and associating liking dogs and the American Flag with being a "proud boy" type, which is patently ridiculous.

That's my problem with it


Without actually taking a dive into Kaeps politics, thousands of people showed up to a game with his face in crosshairs...

 

Now local Fox News star Robby Dinero has been called Racist Robby for nearly a decade in fitness circles for nearly a decade. A screen shot of his email was not a surprise to me or anybody else who has known him. Granted that’s one guy, but he’s made national news. 
 

Buffalo is one of the most segregated cities in the nation and has been for generations. 
 

So when you say “whose to say...” The behavior of Buffalo towards race as a region isn’t spectacular. It’s not outlandish to say Buffalo has a lot of people who aren’t friendly to POC and those people using social media to prop up Josh make it hard to root for him. 
 

Edit: I agree with @C.Biscuit97, Foxworth did a bad job of making his point. If he just came out and said there are too many proud boys tweeting about Josh, it makes it tough for me to root for him. We’d be having a much different discussion. But he got much too cute about it. I doubt the dude hates dogs. 

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1 hour ago, C.Biscuit97 said:

Clay Travis is a grifter.  He’s a mediocre at best sports guy with terrible takes (see his Covid and sports bets) who hated on ESPN for being too political.  Now he does the same thing but on th other side of the aisle.  At first I thought the guy was a clown but I always respect a guy who finds an easy to manipulate base and he just feeds them meat to get them all fired up.  He starts twitter fights with people who are way more popular than him and hope they respond so he can get his name out there.  I would bet he doesn’t believe half of what he says.  It’s kinda funny. 


Agreed.  Although, that doesn’t change anything I said about him, or the importance of having counter-culture outlets like Outkick.  They are simply poor deliverers of a necessary message.  
 

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23 minutes ago, Mango said:


Without actually taking a dive into Kaeps politics, thousands of people showed up to a game with his face in crosshairs...

 

Now local Fox News star Robby Dinero has been called Racist Robby for nearly a decade in fitness circles for nearly a decade. A screen shot of his email was not a surprise to me or anybody else who has known him. Granted that’s one guy, but he’s made national news. 
 

Buffalo is one of the most segregated cities in the nation and has been for generations. 
 

So when you say “whose to say...” The behavior of Buffalo towards race as a region isn’t spectacular. It’s not outlandish to say Buffalo has a lot of people who aren’t friendly to POC and those people using social media to prop up Josh make it hard to root for him. 

So based on minimal evidence of the racist Bills fans you think it perfectly acceptable for ESPN to support the position of JA fans as racist. Got it !  Do your homework on BJ and please tell me he doesn’t have an anti white agenda. It actually is outlandish to say Bills fans aren’t friendly to POC when you don’t actually have evidence of such. What does this have to do with fans going to a game Kap was at ?

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26 minutes ago, Mango said:


Without actually taking a dive into Kaeps politics, thousands of people showed up to a game with his face in crosshairs...

 

Now local Fox News star Robby Dinero has been called Racist Robby for nearly a decade in fitness circles for nearly a decade. A screen shot of his email was not a surprise to me or anybody else who has known him. Granted that’s one guy, but he’s made national news. 
 

Buffalo is one of the most segregated cities in the nation and has been for generations. 
 

So when you say “whose to say...” The behavior of Buffalo towards race as a region isn’t spectacular. It’s not outlandish to say Buffalo has a lot of people who aren’t friendly to POC and those people using social media to prop up Josh make it hard to root for him. 
 

Edit: I agree with @C.Biscuit97, Foxworth did a bad job of making his point. If he just came out and said there are too many proud boys tweeting about Josh, it makes it tough for me to root for him. We’d be having a much different discussion. But he got much too cute about it. I doubt the dude hates dogs. 

Unless you have data showing a disproportionate amount of racists are fans of Josh Allen as compared to the rest of the league you should probably keep your feelings to yourself. 

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55 minutes ago, Mango said:

Buffalo is one of the most segregated cities in the nation and has been for generations. 

 

Is it?  I just googled.  I found a list of the 9 most segregated cities.  It includes (most to better)

Cleveland

Detroit

Cincinnati

Nashville

Boston

Kansas City MO

 

All of those cities have football teams.  Now maybe they were looking at larger cities, I dunno.  Maybe Buffalo would slot in there.  But you wanna make a bet that one could survey local and social media and not find a "shock jock" or a bunch of "proud boy" type fans following the team in those cities?   Should you take that bet?  Should Foxworth?

 

If there's a point I think people would like us to take from the events of this year, it's that racism is alive and well all across the country, and no area ought to be patting itself on the back at being superior.  You made that point well about "liberal" San Francisco and behavior towards Kaepernick.

 

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Edit: I agree with @C.Biscuit97, Foxworth did a bad job of making his point. If he just came out and said there are too many proud boys tweeting about Josh, it makes it tough for me to root for him. We’d be having a much different discussion. But he got much too cute about it. I doubt the dude hates dogs. 

 

Has he had anything to say about football players on other teams who actively went about "liking" racist tweets in college and saying sketchy things on social media? How many "proud boys" tweet about the Bosas if he went looking, and would it make it difficult for him to root for them or their teams? 

 

I'm not saying he has an obligation to conduct a careful objective study, but it's a fair point that he may well be dealing with confirmation bias or the "horns effect" - and he needs to recognize that these are part of discriminatory practices I'm sure he would disavow and criticize.  So why is it OK for him?

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5 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

Unless you have data showing a disproportionate amount of racists are fans of Josh Allen as compared to the rest of the league you should probably keep your feelings to yourself. 


I don’t get this. I am a fan of Josh. He’s proven my last two years of criticism wrong. I don’t consider myself racist. I don’t consider all Josh Allen fans racist. But the view of Buffalo as a region (not just a fan base) from the outside can be understandably racist. 
 

These aren’t feelings these are actual facts:

 

-Thousands of Bills fans showed up to a game with Kaeps face in cross hairs because they didn’t like his politics regarding POC. It’s a thing that happened and not really debatable. It is relevant here because it’s largely how Foxworth is viewing the fan base with his comments. 
 

-Robby Dinero has been called “Racist Robby” by other owners, S&C coaches, etc. around Buffalo for almost a decade now. It’s not a feeling. Its true. He’s the latest reason Buffalo made national news. Recency co-signs past behavior with current news about the city. 
 

-Buffalo is one of the most segregated cities in the country. That’s not a feeling. Literally true. Depending on source it is the 10-20 range. 
 

The point is, it’s not a far leap for somebody to look at Buffalo along with their interactions with some of those fans on Twitter, and think Buffalo has a real issue with POC. 
 

 

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5 minutes ago, Mango said:


I don’t get this. I am a fan of Josh. He’s proven my last two years of criticism wrong. I don’t consider myself racist. I don’t consider all Josh Allen fans racist. But the view of Buffalo as a region (not just a fan base) from the outside can be understandably racist. 
 

These aren’t feelings these are actual facts:

 

-Thousands of Bills fans showed up to a game with Kaeps face in cross hairs because they didn’t like his politics regarding POC. It’s a thing that happened and not really debatable. It is relevant here because it’s largely how Foxworth is viewing the fan base with his comments. 
 

-Robby Dinero has been called “Racist Robby” by other owners, S&C coaches, etc. around Buffalo for almost a decade now. It’s not a feeling. Its true. He’s the latest reason Buffalo made national news. Recency co-signs past behavior with current news about the city. 
 

-Buffalo is one of the most segregated cities in the country. That’s not a feeling. Literally true. Depending on source it is the 10-20 range. 
 

The point is, it’s not a far leap for somebody to look at Buffalo along with their interactions with some of those fans on Twitter, and think Buffalo has a real issue with POC.

 

So what other cities in that 1-10 range have football teams?  See above.

 

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1 minute ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

So what other cities in that 1-10 range have football teams?  See above.

 

Similarly, what other cities have racist shock jocks? What other fanbases wore terrible Kaepernick shirts? It’s a disingenuous argument he’s making.

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The saddest part of all of this as it relates to Bills fans is we are talking and in some cases, arguing with each other as to what level of the Buffalo area is racist, and now our focus and maybe some national focus will be on that instead of what IS a fact, that Bills fans are unquestionably a top 5 fan base in the NFL and the most recent proof being the $700k+ donated as a tribute to Allen’s grandmother. Instead we are talking about something we have NOTHING to do with all because some ESPN idiot decided he wanted to start crap for no reason. 

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23 minutes ago, Mango said:

I don’t consider myself racist. I don’t consider all Josh Allen fans racist.


What an asinine comment.  Do you consider Aaron Rogers to have any racist fans? How about Lamar Jackson, does he have any racist fans?  Or is it just Josh Allen?  And what proof do you have of Josh’s racist fans because based on your statement, he clearly has some.  Are you charting which fan bases are the most racist!

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11 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

Similarly, what other cities have racist shock jocks? What other fanbases wore terrible Kaepernick shirts? It’s a disingenuous argument he’s making.

 

I want to back off a couple steps and make what I think is a valid point, because it's a place where I myself have fallen down at different times in my life.

 

It does take all of us to effect change. 

 

What I think would be constructive is if Domonique Foxworthy stuck closer to the facts.  Said what happened -  maybe something like "I was looking social media praising Josh Allen, and That's Some ***** there - disturbingly racist likes and tweets in a bunch of histories.  I can't tell you if other team's social media is like that or not but man! if you're a fan, and you see someone using racist epiphets or dog whistling - call it out.  Because if you let it slide, you aren't part of the solution, you're part of the problem.  It was disturbing to me, personally, and makes it hard for me to root for Allen even though it doesn't seem to be something Allen perpetuates or supports in any way."

 

I think few of us would have a problem with that at all.

 

But when the reaction to unacceptable stuff is to generalize, maybe apply confirmation bias and so forth - the reaction is part of the problem, and in a way perpetuates it.

 

 

 

 

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1 minute ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

So what other cities in that 1-10 range have football teams?  See above.

 

 

2 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

Similarly, what other cities have racist shock jocks? What other fanbases wore terrible Kaepernick shirts? It’s a disingenuous argument he’s making.


Whatabout-isms at their finest! What about Chicago? What about radio guys elsewhere? Come on....

 

Its not being brought up because it’s not the topic. The topic was Allen’s ascension this season, not Bakers, etc. And those fan bases didn’t make national news for treating Kaep the worst in the league. They also haven’t been on national news lately with a racist business owner telling their customers that they were filthy, third world, pieces of poo in the last few weeks. 


Guys, it’s not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region. That’s it. Simple as that. 
 

So maybe instead of throwing out a million whataboutisms to deflect to other cities that aren’t a point of discussion, either of you just say, “those people suck, and it’s a shame that our fan base has a-holes on the internet (and in our community) that makes some people have a tough time rooting for us. They take away from some of the great things this region is capable of”
 

The deflection here is the most disingenuous part of this conversation. Aaron Rodgers, Cleveland, it doesn’t matter. 
 

 

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1 hour ago, GoBills808 said:

Unless you have data showing a disproportionate amount of racists are fans of Josh Allen as compared to the rest of the league you should probably keep your feelings to yourself. 

Its not that they're disproportionately racist.  Bills fans are disproportionately thin skinned, belligerents, with inferiority complexes, who actively seek out slights, real or perceived, against their city, football team, and QB and have now developed a reputation for freaking out at sports related personalities.  And if you spend a few minutes cruising the average profile of a BillsMafia member who is telling you to kill yourself your chances of finding highly enlightened political opinions are high.

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29 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

So what other cities in that 1-10 range have football teams?  See above.

 

 

 

The fans of those other cities teams aren't famous for doing crazy Bills Mafia culture things(like smashing thru flaming tables) either though.     

 

A common theme in racism is a fear/rejection of culture.

 

Some black people see what mostly-white Bills fans are filmed doing and their extreme allegiance to the team and town and think "why?".  And they think they would be arrested if they did something like that etc..

 

It's just another form of intolerance.  

 

Every race is capable of having biases..........Foxworth admits that as if it should be accepted and OK............but in today's culture it is not OK to be honest about that.  

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11 minutes ago, Mango said:

 


Whatabout-isms at their finest! What about Chicago? What about radio guys elsewhere? Come on....

 

Its not being brought up because it’s not the topic. The topic was Allen’s ascension this season, not Bakers, etc. And those fan bases didn’t make national news for treating Kaep the worst in the league. They also haven’t been on national news lately with a racist business owner telling their customers that they were filthy, third world, pieces of poo in the last few weeks. 


Guys, it’s not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region. That’s it. Simple as that. 
 

So maybe instead of throwing out a million whataboutisms to deflect to other cities that aren’t a point of discussion, either of you just say, “those people suck, and it’s a shame that our fan base has a-holes on the internet (and in our community) that makes some people have a tough time rooting for us. They take away from some of the great things this region is capable of”
 

The deflection here is the most disingenuous part of this conversation. Aaron Rodgers, Cleveland, it doesn’t matter. 
 

 

There is a place for this argument but all these media personalities have proven thus far is they lack the intellectual capacity to carry it.

5 minutes ago, Jauronimo said:

Its not their disproportionately racist.  Bills fans are disproportionately thin skinned, belligerents, with inferiority complexes, who actively seek out slights, real or perceived, against their city, football team, and QB and have now developed a reputation for freaking out at sports related personalities.  

I think you just described the NFL fan base in total.

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19 minutes ago, Mango said:

Whatabout-isms at their finest! What about Chicago? What about radio guys elsewhere? Come on....

 

Its not being brought up because it’s not the topic. The topic was Allen’s ascension this season, not Bakers, etc. And those fan bases didn’t make national news for treating Kaep the worst in the league. They also haven’t been on national news lately with a racist business owner telling their customers that they were filthy, third world, pieces of poo in the last few weeks. 


Guys, it’s not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region. That’s it. Simple as that. 
 

So maybe instead of throwing out a million whataboutisms to deflect to other cities that aren’t a point of discussion, either of you just say, “those people suck, and it’s a shame that our fan base has a-holes on the internet (and in our community) that makes some people have a tough time rooting for us. They take away from some of the great things this region is capable of”
 

The deflection here is the most disingenuous part of this conversation. Aaron Rodgers, Cleveland, it doesn’t matter.

 

I think you're missing a point yourself, Mango, and it's an important one, so I'll go out on a limb here and try to make it.

 

How exactly do you think prejudice originates?  It originates, I believe, in people's experience.  Humans have fantastic innate pattern matching ability and ability to generalize from those perceived patterns.  These are positive survival traits - "don't eat plants with leaves like that" "people with that physical appearance belong to the tribe that's trying to capture our people and take our lands". 

 

Where they become negative, is when we're all one world, all part of one society, yet we're judging other people based on their membership in a group.  Maybe it's a group we personally had a negative experience with - someone of that skin color was a difficult employee, hostile and inefficient.  Someone of that religion did us wrong.  So we generalize, and associate those traits with all people of that skin color or religion.  That's an example of racism or prejudice, and it's wrong.  Period.

 

You're giving examples of racist behavior from a Buffalo business owner in the news.  Apparently Foxworthy, scrolling through social media, found some racist Bills fans.  I'm sure they're there - they're everywhere.  It's entirely appropriate to call that out as he sees it.  AS HE SEES IT.

 

Yet by accepting it as appropriate to generalize and apply it to a whole group of people - Buffalo, Bills fans, Allen supporters - "Its not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region" - Foxworthy (and your defense) are doing fundamentally the same thing that generates prejudice and racism in the first place -using our fantastic innate human pattern matching ability and generalizing from one or a handful of observations, to a whole group. 

 

And that's also wrong.  And people get upset about it, and then it deflects from the root problem, which is, as you allude to - that there are sucky people among us.

 

 

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5 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

There is a place for this argument but all these media personalities have proven thus far is they lack the intellectual capacity to carry it.

I think you just described the NFL fan base in total.

Bills Mafia literally started with a bunch of Twitter Warriors who banded together to fight Adam Schefter.  I don't think every fan base has that distinction.  Then there's the dude who made the news by flying to Baltimore to "confront" a radio host.  

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3 hours ago, C.Biscuit97 said:

This whole thing is embarrassing. Reading some of the tweets, some idiot Bills fans just proved him right on the racist stuff.  I wish more fans would call out Those idiots. 
 

I think the original point is that for a while a guy who plays like Allen, If black, would be questioned about his long term ability to play quarterback.  That the white guy with questionable production against not great college competition while the Heisman trophy winning qb falls and gets talked about moving positions.  And through 2 years there was some truth in that.  A counter I would say in regards to Allen is he was a very criticized player.

 

as someone who has been skeptical of Allen through 2 years, IMO, there is absolutely nothing to question him about except maybe seeing how he does in the playoffs.  Dude has answer every question I have had about him and exceed as a player more than I ever imagine.  It doesn’t matter but I’m as proud of him as any player I have watched.  And the thing I really appreciate it is he didn’t get sensitive about it.  
 

I never got the need for fans to get so angry at people’s opinions.  I’m just throughly enjoying the season and see nothing negative about it.  But we do have some loser fans who take everything person and they make us look bad. Right now, Foxworth and Jones have been proven wrong on Allen.  That’s all that matters.  But there are those losers who say embarrassing things that we should never have associated with our fanbase. Obviously, it’s minority of idiots but I’d like to think we call out those losers.  Some fans get more mad s our this that Allen, who is laughing about it.  It’s weird. But don’t make us all look bad.

Yeah, well it's twitter. Twitter is the home for idiots to voice their idiot opinions to the world. Certainly you have those for Bills fans and fans for all other teams as well.

 

But ... I do fear that Bills fans in general are getting a little annoying. They attack anyone with a contrary opinion (doesn't matter if they are right or wrong) and they just seem to have really thin skin. And they enjoy rubbing it in other people's faces when they are proven right. That's supreme annoyance, right there. And of course the majority of fans aren't necessarily like that, but the twitter group of fans seems to be, and those are the ones seen and heard. And, I see it getting worse as the Bills get better. Like they see a need to unload their multi-decade frustration on everyone else. So if things continue, I think other fan bases will quickly see Bills fans as the worst, most annoying fan base in the league (albeit a charitable bunch).

 

Now, making assumptions about Bills fans and their political leanings and if they are or aren't racist is taking it way, WAY to far. And really dumb. You can't make broad sweeping judgements about any large group of people like that. Doing so just makes you look dumb.

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11 minutes ago, Jauronimo said:

Bills Mafia literally started with a bunch of Twitter Warriors who banded together to fight Adam Schefter.  I don't think every fan base has that distinction.  Then there's the dude who made the news by flying to Baltimore to "confront" a radio host.  

Do you understand I’ve waited 2.5 long years to have my Josh Allen analyses validated and these chuckleheads are preventing my full realization? Thin skinned or no I need relief already.

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26 minutes ago, Jauronimo said:

Its not that they're disproportionately racist.  Bills fans are disproportionately thin skinned, belligerents, with inferiority complexes, who actively seek out slights, real or perceived, against their city, football team, and QB and have now developed a reputation for freaking out at sports related personalities.  And if you spend a few minutes cruising the average profile of a BillsMafia member who is telling you to kill yourself your chances of finding highly enlightened political opinions are high.

I agree totally on the first part about Bills fans being thin skinned. I don't quite see eye to eye with you on your point about political enlightenment.

 

So you're saying that if you look at a few profiles of Bills fans and they happen to lean a certain way politically that it makes sense to condemn ALL Bills fans? Nobody in their right mind would do that. Right? That's just a supremely small sample size. You could spend weeks looking at profiles and not even scratch the surface for a fan base, especially the LARGE portions who don't even regularly use social media.

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1 minute ago, MJS said:

I agree totally on the first part about Bills fans being thin skinned. I don't quite see eye to eye with you on your point about political enlightenment.

 

So you're saying that if you look at a few profiles of Bills fans and they happen to lean a certain way politically that it makes sense to condemn ALL Bills fans? Nobody in their right mind would do that. Right? That's just a supremely small sample size. You could spend weeks looking at profiles and not even scratch the surface for a fan base, especially the LARGE portions who don't even regularly use social media.

No, I'm not.  Where are you getting that?

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39 minutes ago, Mango said:

 


Whatabout-isms at their finest! What about Chicago? What about radio guys elsewhere? Come on....

 

Its not being brought up because it’s not the topic. The topic was Allen’s ascension this season, not Bakers, etc. And those fan bases didn’t make national news for treating Kaep the worst in the league. They also haven’t been on national news lately with a racist business owner telling their customers that they were filthy, third world, pieces of poo in the last few weeks. 


Guys, it’s not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region. That’s it. Simple as that. 
 

So maybe instead of throwing out a million whataboutisms to deflect to other cities that aren’t a point of discussion, either of you just say, “those people suck, and it’s a shame that our fan base has a-holes on the internet (and in our community) that makes some people have a tough time rooting for us. They take away from some of the great things this region is capable of”
 

The deflection here is the most disingenuous part of this conversation. Aaron Rodgers, Cleveland, it doesn’t matter. 
 

 

 

(Disclaimer) I am not a republican or a democrat. I live in a very liberal city, but grew up in a conservative area. I have friends and family on every side of any issue you can think of to debate, and I love them all.

 

What I think this comes down to is that over the last 4-5 years, many people on the left side of the political aisle have been convinced into believing that any republican or Trump supporter is ipso facto a racist. This is sooooo wrong (and shouldn't even be in the realm of consideration). It hurts me to see intelligent, caring people in my life really believe that 50% of the country are racists. But, when that is your mind set, all it takes is to see one person with a supportive tweet of Trump (or someone on the right), or for someone else to retweet one of Trump's tweets and bam, they are a racist. And considering that western New York is traditionally a conservative area, I am not sure that DF even ever saw anything outwardly racist, all he had to see is someone support Trump and bam, Josh's fans are racists. This is his own issue with seeing racists around every corner and whatever idiotic, unresearched theory he has about the Tyrod situation. It has nothing to do with Josh, Buffalo, or the Bills fan base.

 

And I don't think that you can bring up the Kaepernick issue as racism either, imo. I agree that having signs of Kaep in the crosshairs is extremely distasteful. But these two groups of people were arguing two different issues. And that was the problem with the whole debate. For Kaepernick and his supporters, they were standing up against police brutality towards African Americans, racial profiling, etc. etc. For the more conservative side, they were arguing about not disrespecting the flag/country, what it stood for, supporting veterans, etc. They could never come to terms because they were arguing two different issues and no one would listen to the other side and try and understand their stance. But everyone who didn't support Kaepernick or were angry with him weren't racists (some might have been), but most were just arguing a different issue. And everyone on both sides of that whole thing could have handled it better, no question.

 

And you can hardly call an entire city or region racist because of one stupid, rich real estate owner. Come on dude.

 

There is no question that racism still exists, and we should all call it out/stand against it wherever we see it. But at this point, I feel like a lot of people (like DF) are just chasing ghosts. And that is a good way to actually promote and perpetuate more racism, rather than trying to overcome it, imo.

 

 

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27 minutes ago, Jauronimo said:

No, I'm not.  Where are you getting that?

You brought up browsing people's profiles and coming to conclusions about them based on their political postings, right? And that gets projected on the fan base.

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And I'm not surprised at all here our local media morons coming not to trash Foxworth and defend the fans......nope they're going to trash Tlay Cravis (so cool Nate not using his name for search or links to him purposes or whatever).

 

What a freaking joke these 2 are:

 

And yeah Nate...this is just Twitter "nonsense."

 

 

 

 

That's what you're going to hear on the radio in a few hours.  Jeremy and Howard will spend more time trashing Clay Travis and call for all Bills fans to maybe reflect on how "racist" we are.   

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31 minutes ago, folz said:

 

(Disclaimer) I am not a republican or a democrat. I live in a very liberal city, but grew up in a conservative area. I have friends and family on every side of any issue you can think of to debate, and I love them all.

 

What I think this comes down to is that over the last 4-5 years, many people on the left side of the political aisle have been convinced into believing that any republican or Trump supporter is ipso facto a racist. This is sooooo wrong (and shouldn't even be in the realm of consideration). It hurts me to see intelligent, caring people in my life really believe that 50% of the country are racists. But, when that is your mind set, all it takes is to see one person with a supportive tweet of Trump (or someone on the right), or for someone else to retweet one of Trump's tweets and bam, they are a racist. And considering that western New York is traditionally a conservative area, I am not sure that DF even ever saw anything outwardly racist, all he had to see is someone support Trump and bam, Josh's fans are racists. This is his own issue with seeing racists around every corner and whatever idiotic, unresearched theory he has about the Tyrod situation. It has nothing to do with Josh, Buffalo, or the Bills fan base.

 

And I don't think that you can bring up the Kaepernick issue as racism either, imo. I agree that having signs of Kaep in the crosshairs is extremely distasteful. But these two groups of people were arguing two different issues. And that was the problem with the whole debate. For Kaepernick and his supporters, they were standing up against police brutality towards African Americans, racial profiling, etc. etc. For the more conservative side, they were arguing about not disrespecting the flag/country, what it stood for, supporting veterans, etc. They could never come to terms because they were arguing two different issues and no one would listen to the other side and try and understand their stance. But everyone who didn't support Kaepernick or were angry with him weren't racists (some might have been), but most were just arguing a different issue. And everyone on both sides of that whole thing could have handled it better, no question.

 

And you can hardly call an entire city or region racist because of one stupid, rich real estate owner. Come on dude.

 

There is no question that racism still exists, and we should all call it out/stand against it wherever we see it. But at this point, I feel like a lot of people (like DF) are just chasing ghosts. And that is a good way to actually promote and perpetuate more racism, rather than trying to overcome it, imo.

 

 

Incredible post and perfectly put!

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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

I think you're missing a point yourself, Mango, and it's an important one, so I'll go out on a limb here and try to make it.

 

How exactly do you think prejudice originates?  It originates, I believe, in people's experience.  Humans have fantastic innate pattern matching ability and ability to generalize from those perceived patterns.  These are positive survival traits - "don't eat plants with leaves like that" "people with that physical appearance belong to the tribe that's trying to capture our people and take our lands". 

 

Where they become negative, is when we're all one world, all part of one society, yet we're judging other people based on their membership in a group.  Maybe it's a group we personally had a negative experience with - someone of that skin color was a difficult employee, hostile and inefficient.  Someone of that religion did us wrong.  So we generalize, and associate those traits with all people of that skin color or religion.  That's an example of racism or prejudice, and it's wrong.  Period.

 

You're giving examples of racist behavior from a Buffalo business owner in the news.  Apparently Foxworthy, scrolling through social media, found some racist Bills fans.  I'm sure they're there - they're everywhere.  It's entirely appropriate to call that out as he sees it.  AS HE SEES IT.

 

Yet by accepting it as appropriate to generalize and apply it to a whole group of people - Buffalo, Bills fans, Allen supporters - "Its not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region" - Foxworthy (and your defense) are doing fundamentally the same thing that generates prejudice and racism in the first place -using our fantastic innate human pattern matching ability and generalizing from one or a handful of observations, to a whole group. 

 

And that's also wrong.  And people get upset about it, and then it deflects from the root problem, which is, as you allude to - that there are sucky people among us.

 

 

 

This is a fantastic point but no one will listen because it takes away their license to discriminate. No one should generalize at all but it happens and they simply dont care who it impacts when they do because they don't see it is a marginalized group in need of protecting. Is discrimination wrong no matter who it is against? Absolutely. 

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1 hour ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

I think you're missing a point yourself, Mango, and it's an important one, so I'll go out on a limb here and try to make it.

 

How exactly do you think prejudice originates?  It originates, I believe, in people's experience.  Humans have fantastic innate pattern matching ability and ability to generalize from those perceived patterns.  These are positive survival traits - "don't eat plants with leaves like that" "people with that physical appearance belong to the tribe that's trying to capture our people and take our lands". 

 

Where they become negative, is when we're all one world, all part of one society, yet we're judging other people based on their membership in a group.  Maybe it's a group we personally had a negative experience with - someone of that skin color was a difficult employee, hostile and inefficient.  Someone of that religion did us wrong.  So we generalize, and associate those traits with all people of that skin color or religion.  That's an example of racism or prejudice, and it's wrong.  Period.

 

You're giving examples of racist behavior from a Buffalo business owner in the news.  Apparently Foxworthy, scrolling through social media, found some racist Bills fans.  I'm sure they're there - they're everywhere.  It's entirely appropriate to call that out as he sees it.  AS HE SEES IT.

 

Yet by accepting it as appropriate to generalize and apply it to a whole group of people - Buffalo, Bills fans, Allen supporters - "Its not that hard to see how somebody could get to a spot where they think Buffalo is an inherently racist region" - Foxworthy (and your defense) are doing fundamentally the same thing that generates prejudice and racism in the first place -using our fantastic innate human pattern matching ability and generalizing from one or a handful of observations, to a whole group. 

 

And that's also wrong.  And people get upset about it, and then it deflects from the root problem, which is, as you allude to - that there are sucky people among us.

 

 

Who are you quoting?

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27 minutes ago, MJS said:

You brought up browsing people's profiles and coming to conclusions about them based on their political postings, right? And that gets projected on the fan base.

Foxworth brought that up.  That is rather important thing to address if we are going to discuss what Foxworth actually said rather than what many people here hope he said in order to satisfy their thirst for outrage.  How have you interpreted those words to mean I endorse condemning ALL Bills fans?

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 This thread is chock full of irony.  Its rife with cancel culture, which is hilarious because many of the same people calling for his job bemoan all the "censorship" on social media and have declared cancel culture to be the greatest existential threat to this republic.  How many people outraged by Foxworth's comments will say something ***** about Californians or Texans for their states general political leanings without batting an eye?  Or take a shot at Floridians for being stupid white trash without a giving it a second thought?  Peak irony is when swaths of people who are generally immune to nuance immediately sniffed out the "hes calling us racist!" dog whistle in the quote below.

 

Quote

"It's based on the people that are defending Josh Allen. I would be 100 percent lying if I said that when Josh does something dumb, a little part of me doesn't get happy. ... It's because the people who are telling me that Josh is the Second Coming, and Josh is better than everybody are people with American flags and dogs and skull and crossbones. … If you go just take a dip into their tweet history, it's some really concerning retweets and likes. … It's not about Josh," Foxworth said. Foxworth added that "generally, I'm pro-player, and I'm looking for ways to understand a player's position and defend a player. But in Josh's case, it's not about him. He is the ground on which we are fighting," Western Journal also noted.

 

Domonique might not like me because of the actions or politics of some of you and I could not care less.  I'm far more interested in how many people will be so chafed by my opening words that they won't read this far and will call me out on my joke at Florida man's expense with a snappy "gotcha" retort as if it wasn't 100% intentional.  

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1 hour ago, Jauronimo said:

 This thread is chock full of irony.  Its rife with cancel culture, which is hilarious because many of the same people calling for his job bemoan all the "censorship" on social media and have declared cancel culture to be the greatest existential threat to this republic.  How many people outraged by Foxworth's comments will say something ***** about Californians or Texans for their states general political leanings without batting an eye?  Or take a shot at Floridians for being stupid white trash without a giving it a second thought?  Peak irony is when swaths of people who are generally immune to nuance immediately sniffed out the "hes calling us racist!" dog whistle in the quote below.

I think the frustration is if it was the reverse (for example a white ESPN commentator saying he hopes Lamar Jackson fails because his twitter followers are BLM activists posting anti cop rhetoric) they'd either be fired or forced to apologize.  Most likely the former.  This should pry get moved to ppp btw.

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8 hours ago, CincyBillsFan said:

 

Oh come on.  What proof do you or anyone have that Allen is a favorite of the Proud Boys?  And who cares if he was? 

 

Why do we have so much trouble calling out a racist in these situations?  By any standard this clowns comments were racist and we wouldn't accept these excuses if a white reporter said something like this.

 

 

We're good people.  Taking a shot at us like this is simply wrong.  Screw this guy.

 

 

 

Actually I would.....  But probably so is Brady, Rodgers & Brees......  

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Simon locked this and I concur because, while the discussion has been good for the most part, the line is very thin. 

 

We've already had one very well written post bring up their beliefs about "left side" vs "republican or Trump supporter" and that's going to quickly go down the political wormhole from there.  Maybe it's a line that can't be held, I don't know.  I tried.

 

My kid and I had this discussion 4 years ago.  Her question is: Whoever you support politically: is racism and racist behavior being praised or tolerated a "deal breaker" for you, or is it not?  If you have friends or relatives or associates who say hateful or racist stuff (not at age 15, or 10 years ago, or 5 years ago, but Now, Today, In the present) is that something you're willing to call out and take a stand against, or is it not?

 

I'd like to leave you with this from our good Twitter friend @Brother_Bill.  I would encourage folks to click on the link, and read the story, about Bruce Smith from 1992.

 

I think I've made my views on Foxworth's remarks clear above and it's not fair play for me to reiterate, but the point remains that Foxworth's faulty generalizations don't invalidate whatever underlying observations gave rise to them and shouldn't obscure our need, as individuals, to stand up against racist and otherwise poor individual behavior when encountered. 

 

"It takes all of us", as it says on Josh Allen's helmet

 

Peace out

 

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