-im retired...but a vodka gimlet is a nice warm weather cocktail. Canned seltzer booze is for chicks/kids.
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-idk...looks fascist to me.
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My question is not meant to say anything about the wisdom/rightness of kneeling v. not, but white people losing their minds about kneeling definitely made me start questioning the tradition.
It's a powerful song in person before a big game, absolutely. I just find it odd it's treated like a "holy" song but played at every random athletic event in these United States.The Anthem, in person, before a big game gives me chills & sometimes water eyes depending on the performance or setting. Certainly never been annoyed by it.
Weird take (thought) to have imo.
It’s played for people who understand US history.It's a powerful song in person before a big game, absolutely. I just find it odd it's treated like a "holy" song but played at every random athletic event in these United States.
I actually lol'd at "libshit," @_Chase_. I am stealing that word, hope that's cool.
Just missing the setting and/or occasion for a Bud Light Seltzer, richie. Poolside before going home to fire up the grill and let the lassies run in the yard? Post paddle hour on an unseasonably warm Thursday evening? Genuinely curious here and thanks in advance.
Hopeless.Actually it's not. It's 100% true.
STEAMING HOT POTENTIALLY TERRIBLE TAKE ALERT:
Why do we play the National Anthem at every athletic event? Why does every Little League, NCAA, NAIA, Upward, NFL, high school, etc etc. game need a hearty dose of Francis Scott Key before it can get underway?
Play it at international events, NBA Finals, the Super Bowl, World Series, "big deal events," sure. But for random dimly lit SEC West matchups tipping at 9 pm onJefferson PilotSEC Network, etc., why? Why play it?
And seltzer is disgusting.
You don't have to always get so drunk, anth.
oh it wouldn't change a thing, it's just a tradition I find odd. And as catlanta pointed out, it's not a particularly "old" tradition, really.Ask yourself what would happen if we just stopped playing the anthem all together because some people don’t like it
Would they be happy then?
Would that settle things ?
oh it wouldn't change a thing, it's just a tradition I find odd. And as catlanta pointed out, it's not a particularly "old" tradition, really.
I'll readily cop to being a person who is not particularly enamored with tradition of any sort, which is a pretty minority view. what @ukalum01 pointed out is certainly a valid take.
Are you a f—ing vampire that’s been around since the Middle Ages?And as catlanta pointed out, it's not a particularly "old" tradition, really.