I won't be particularly upset by who wins or loses. They're both decent teams demographically relatively speaking for the NFL with White QBs. I lean toward Seattle because of Sam Darnold being thrown on the Caste trash heap years ago as a "bust" yet persevering after going to San Francisco, Minnesota and now the Seahawks. Drake Maye is a great story but he has many years to pursue Super Bowl rings.
Low-trust, rabidly multi-racial, multi-ethnic societies lead to this, doesn't matter if the elites continuously insist it's a holy "democracy" or not. Land of the free and home of the brave and all that:
On Sunday, Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara will be filled with tens of thousands of fans, athletes, support staff and members of the media. And they’ll be monitored by a figurative and literal army of law enforcement and military.
In 2016, I covered Super Bowl 50 at Levi’s Stadium. I’ve never seen that level of security before or since — starting from the moment I got onto the media shuttle from San Francisco to the South Bay. We were instructed by NFL staff to flip our media passes over to hide our photos. When asked why, we were told it was to prevent anyone from copying our passes. It seemed unlikely to me that someone passing by on Mission Street was going to take such a clean photo of my media badge that they could make a facsimile, but the unsmiling staff were insistent. I did as I was told.
Upon arrival at Levi’s Stadium, we got our first look at the police checkpoints stopping cars from getting near the venue. Camo-colored Humvees were parked everywhere, and troops in fatigues were watching every corner. It was like entering a war zone.
Then, there was the security screening. It was unlike any other I’ve experienced as a member of the media. Camerapeople were taking apart their gear bags, unloading every piece for inspection, before running everything through scanners. I remember thinking it was like going through security at the airport. Later, I learned it was exactly that: The NFL worked with U.S. Customs and Border Protection to scan all cargo going into the stadium, as well as some of the Super Bowl week events in San Francisco.
Inside and outside the stadium, practically every major law enforcement agency was on patrol. Unseen snipers watched. Air and Marine Operations aircraft buzzed overhead, enforcing no-fly restrictions over the stadium on game day. FBI agents and officers from the Department of Homeland Security, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, walked the streets and concourses.
full article: https://www.sfgate.com/sports/article/santa-clara-security-21331401.php
Low-trust, rabidly multi-racial, multi-ethnic societies lead to this, doesn't matter if the elites continuously insist it's a holy "democracy" or not. Land of the free and home of the brave and all that:
On Sunday, Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara will be filled with tens of thousands of fans, athletes, support staff and members of the media. And they’ll be monitored by a figurative and literal army of law enforcement and military.
In 2016, I covered Super Bowl 50 at Levi’s Stadium. I’ve never seen that level of security before or since — starting from the moment I got onto the media shuttle from San Francisco to the South Bay. We were instructed by NFL staff to flip our media passes over to hide our photos. When asked why, we were told it was to prevent anyone from copying our passes. It seemed unlikely to me that someone passing by on Mission Street was going to take such a clean photo of my media badge that they could make a facsimile, but the unsmiling staff were insistent. I did as I was told.
Upon arrival at Levi’s Stadium, we got our first look at the police checkpoints stopping cars from getting near the venue. Camo-colored Humvees were parked everywhere, and troops in fatigues were watching every corner. It was like entering a war zone.
Then, there was the security screening. It was unlike any other I’ve experienced as a member of the media. Camerapeople were taking apart their gear bags, unloading every piece for inspection, before running everything through scanners. I remember thinking it was like going through security at the airport. Later, I learned it was exactly that: The NFL worked with U.S. Customs and Border Protection to scan all cargo going into the stadium, as well as some of the Super Bowl week events in San Francisco.
Inside and outside the stadium, practically every major law enforcement agency was on patrol. Unseen snipers watched. Air and Marine Operations aircraft buzzed overhead, enforcing no-fly restrictions over the stadium on game day. FBI agents and officers from the Department of Homeland Security, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, walked the streets and concourses.
full article: https://www.sfgate.com/sports/article/santa-clara-security-21331401.php
