Rothlisberger is the kind of White athlete I hate. The type that cannot see the hate for him that is all around him from his supposed "team" and continues to give blood sweat and tears to a group that would gladly throw him under a bus. This latest paean to the Steelers, I heard him on the radio the other day pledging his lifetime allegiance to the team, is nauseating. It's a business dumb-ass not a religion, if this million dollar corporation don't want you find one that will. Perhaps he's just faking it for the media which I would prefer to him actually wanting to live and die for that ungrateful bunch.
The relentless hate against Big Ben never abates for long. Tonight on the local news there was a tease before a commercial break about Ben responding to a "former teammate" who said his leadership skills are bad. I didn't stick around to watch; maybe it was Hines Ward, the self-pitying fool who previously lambasted Roethlisberger but was never held to account for it, or some other black former teammate.
I noticed through a search that some DWF site was criticizing Stephen A. Smiff because he said Ben "isn't a bad guy," after Smiff said the other day something to the effect that women sometimes bring about violence against them by their husbands and boyfriends. To say what Smiff did is of course is taboo in feminazi Amerika, and of course Smiff didn't pay the price that a White broadcaster would who said the same thing. The "logic" of Smiff's critic was how dare he say something positive about Ben following his faux pas of the other day after the incident in a Georgia bar a few years ago in which a drunk slut wearing a "down to f..." button claimed Ben raped her. No charges were ever filed, but Roethlisberger still was handed a four-game suspension by Roger Goodell for a non-existent transgression. In other words, Ben in the popular DWF culture is still guilty of rape even though no rape occurred.
Then in yesterday's local rag, there was an article by Michael Powell of The New York Times on Ray Rice's suspension, titled "Rice Benefits from Strange Scale of Justice." Seemed like a reasonable article from the headline -- until I began to read it. After Rice was criticized, Powell wrote: "Here comes commissioner Roger Goodell. The tousle-haired commissioner is a football lifer, having spent his career inside the NFL, which is another way of saying he knows psychotic behavior. He has dealt with large men and their brandished pistols, their assault rifles, their beat-downs, their accidental shootings and their many and varied misbehaviors. A few years ago, he had to deal with Ben Roethlisberger, the star quarterback and toast of the Steelers, who was accused of
but ultimately not charged with what sounded a bit like rape in a bar in Milledgeville, Ga. Goodell suspended him for four games."
So instead of naming some of the endless array of black NFL players who
have been charged with serious crimes, Powell named only one player to compare to Rice -- Roethlisberger, who was never charged with a crime and yet was still suspended in grand Orwellian style.
Oh, and below Powell's article was an update article on the Steelers, which dealt almost exclusively with Roethlisberger, who has carried the team on his broad shoulders for the past half dozen years, or the entire time black supremacist Mike Tomlin has been coaching the team. And so it goes. . . day after day, year after year, in anti-White Amerika.