The World Wide Leader In Lunacy

Everyone that watches sports knows ESPN has become this weird fever swamp of liberal lunacy. They slobber over Obama, for example. They find a reason to do an Obama story every day, despite the fact Obama knows nothing about sports and they are supposed to be a sports network. They are suspending someone for crime think every week it seems. That and they have notorious bigots like Michael Wilbon and Kevin Blackistone on regularly.

What’s stunning to me is how they work so hard to destroy the very things that allow them to exist. For example, they have been cheering the court cases against the NCAA, even though ESPN counts on college sports to survive. Yet, their on-air talent is forever cheering the demise of college sports. We see the same stuff with the NFL and major league baseball. The only sports they promote are soccer (anti-American) and basketball, anti-white. Otherwise, they are anti-sports.

Now we have one of their retarded people – and let’s be honest here. Kevin Cowherd probably has an 85 IQ – is bashing their customers for NASCAR. Further, he is trying to piss off the part of the country most crazy for sports – The South. But, as we know from watching these lunatics, they will jump on a grenade to spite the bogeymen. There are no more important bogeymen than white southern men.

Moonday on The Herd, ESPN’s Colin Cowherd partially blamed what he described as NASCAR’s southern “eye-for-an-eye culture” for the tragic death of driver Kevin Ward Jr., who was run over by three-time champion Tony Stewart Saturday at the Canandaigua Motorsport Park dirt track. As for Stewart, Cowherd said, “I watched the video seven, eight times: He revved up, other racers put on the brakes.”

Cowherd started off the 11 a.m. EST hour with a rant ripping the “machismo” perpetuated by NASCAR and what he repeatedly called the “eye-for-an-eye” worldview of the South. During his opening monologue and his follow-up discussion with NASCAR analyst Marty Smith, Cowherd criticized the sport for failing to ban running on the track and other dangerous displays of “bravado” long ago, and suggested a number of times that three-time champion Tony Stewart could have avoided hitting Ward.

Cowherd began the segment by citing NASCAR’s embrace of dangerous displays of masculinity and “settling the score,” saying that it, like the NFL, NHL and boxing, deliberately allowed those elements to draw in a larger male audience.

Maybe what they need is some homosexual drivers. Put a couple of trannies out there and magically it will be better!

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gobsmacker
gobsmacker
10 years ago

When ESPN talking heads begin ranting about the unfairness of college football players not getting paid, I can only wonder whether any of them have ever heard of Title IX. You can bet that if the schools pay the guys, they will also have to pay the gals. And since women’s softball—just to take one example—makes no money at the gate, plus their squads are big and their travel costs huge, it’s always going to be a big money loser, unlike big time men’s football. But, colleges fear federal penalties under Title IX, so they’ll never drop women’s softball regardless… Read more »

UKer
UKer
10 years ago

Interesting that ESPN always does an Obama piece daily. Curiously, here in the UK the BBC always lead when they can with Obama. When the news broke about Robin Williams’ suicide, they not only lead the flagship news with that story but started with Obama’s comments on the man.

No one in the UK voted for Obama and we have our own problems with disaffected minorities. However, your president gets pole position no mater what happens. It is like someone high up in London cares about the man…

gobsmacker
gobsmacker
10 years ago

Those dangerous displays of masculine testosterone are what keep many countries civilized. I say the world has a choice: pick one, the Olympics or World War III? Cowherd has probably never seen a sprint car in his whole life, so he doesn’t know there’s a huge wing on the top of the car that extends far down one side of the car (right side from the driver’s perspective), almost completely blocking the driver’s view in that direction. That’s where the irate Ward was standing when he was hit by Stewart’s car. Among his other mistakes, Ward couldn’t have chosen a… Read more »

CaptDMO
CaptDMO
10 years ago

I cannot BELIEVE you didn’t come up with a better “trannie” line than tHAT involving NASCAR! *sheesh*