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Jun 24 2023

NHL Lightens Up on LGBT Bullying

Hats off to Ivan Provorov. His courage proved contagious. At last enough resistance has developed so that the bullying moonbats who run the NHL have been forced to ease off:

Thursday, after months of player and team revolts, the NHL finally righted its 13-year wrong of making players props for Pride. After hinting at the need to “reevaluate” the practice in the offseason, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman finally said the league will no longer co-opt athletes for a radical message many reject.

After four months of trying to contain his players’ revolt, Bettman says rainbow-themed jerseys will no longer be worn.

It isn’t asking much that hockey players not be forced to proclaim their allegiance to sexual perversion as a political ideology. But successful acts of rebellion lead to bigger ones.

For fans, who’ve had to endure the sight of their favorite players draped in the colors of child mutilation and sexual extremism, the league’s reversal is more proof of the cultural earthquake shaking America’s woke foundation.

Also constituting proof are the devastating boycotts against Anheuser-Busch and Target for shoving LGBT depravity down customers’ throats.

We are nowhere near achieving critical mass. Even in the aftermath of the fan revolt when the Los Angeles Dodgers held a ceremony to revere ostentatiously blasphemous perverts, the Kansas City Royals pressed the agenda by force-feeding their fans with drag queens. However, MLB has stopped compelling players to wear LGBT-promoting clothing.

Major League Baseball arrived at that decision before hockey, quietly telling teams as far back as February that they wouldn’t be opening themselves up to the NHL’s nightmare. In the directive, which MLB’s front office kept under wraps until this month, they quashed all player Pride gear.

A likely reason was fear that rebellion in the NHL ranks would spread to MLB.

“We have told teams, in terms of actual uniforms, hats, bases, that we don’t think putting logos on them is a good idea just because of the desire to protect players,” MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told The Washington Post’s Chelsea Janes. At the end of the day, he said, we should not be “putting them in a position of doing something that may make them uncomfortable because of their personal views.”

That was not an issue until it became apparent that a few players may have enough character to push back.

If we all show that character, LGBT depravity can be pushed all the way back into hell where it originated.

In the meantime, stand by for more crybullying by our degenerate ruling class.

On tips from ABC of the ANC, Ed McAninch, and Jester.


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