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Talking about Ime Udoka? Brett Favre is way more interesting…

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Why is Ime Udoka’s love life more popular than Brett Favre’s alleged crime?

Why are people more interested in Ime Udoka and his unethical behavior than they are in Brett Favre and the state of Mississippi?

The idea of a coach having a consensual relationship with a member of the staff is disgusting. There shouldn’t be any sort of power dynamic because it’s unethical and perhaps harmful. And it’s just stupid to fail to beat Nia Long. However, there should not be a national debate that lasts for almost a full day.

This news was apparently leaked. Why?

The sport of tearing others down seems to be a national pastime. National Pork for some. Furthermore, the knives come out whenever a woman is involved, regardless of her race.

Vice President of Player and Organizational Development for the Celtics Throughout the day, Black lady Allison Feaster was the target of online harassment. People began accusing her of being the woman in the photo that was widely shared online. The anti-feminism was glaringly obvious and totally off-base. What she isn’t doing is anything.

However, the need to evaluate Celtics ladies in the same way one would evaluate a deck of playing cards is dangerous and repulsive. For over 24 hours, the Celtics said nothing. And it seems the women who work on the team are not safe.

On Thursday, according to ESPN, Stephen A. Smith observed, paraphrasing, “There are enough white folks in professional sports that are doing their thing,” according to ESPN. There seems to be no news on them everywhere. The timing of this conversation seems odd.

A one-year ban for a mutually agreeable romance is excessive. According to the Celtics, he broke the rules multiple times. Initially, former NBA player Matt Barnes defended Udoka. Barnes, upon learning more, stated that the situation was “100 times uglier than we expected.” When it comes to what we don’t know, what exactly is it? What you’re saying is a lot.

I’m curious as to whether or not Brett Favre will be criminally charged for his alleged participation in a welfare fraud scheme before we learn the facts of Udoka’s one-year suspension. What will happen to his Hall of Fame status, if any? Will we question why the question of who is sleeping on Udoka’s couch is more pressing than the theft of millions of dollars from the state of Mississippi by politicians, celebrities, and others.

It’s been a rough go in the poorest state in the United States.

This Monday, a group of Jackson, Mississippi, residents filed a lawsuit against city officials and contractors seeking class-action status. Those entrusted to safeguard the populace failed to maintain the city’s water infrastructure, which is used by the city’s large Black population. This summer, around 150,000 people lacked access to a necessity for life.

Why, after all the mistreatment and inhumanity in Flint, Michigan, did we let the people of Jackson live without reliably clean water?

However, that’s not all of it. The Department of Justice announced that John Davis, the former director of the Mississippi Department of Human Services, pled guilty for his role in a scam that defrauded the state’s most vulnerable residents out of nearly $80 million in welfare funds on the same day the Celtics affair dominated the news.

Over the past three years, this controversy has been widely reported. The former Green Bay Packers quarterback, Favre, is being accused of pocketing $1.1 million for lectures he never gave. As far as the poor can tell, Favre, who is worth an estimated $100 million, is a con artist. He also allegedly directed a few million more to businesses with which he was associated. The $1.1 million was requested to be repaid by him.

Earlier this month, text conversations revealing the deliberate nature of Favre’s and Governor Phil Bryant’s conduct were made public. A new volleyball stadium at the University of Southern Mississippi, where Favre’s daughter played, was allegedly built with funds misappropriated by officials working with nonprofit leaders and sports celebrities, as reported by Mississippi Today.

A man with his kind of wealth could have built a volleyball stadium and given free inspirational talks. In America, though, neither Favre nor the folks in Mississippi are particularly top of mind.

In this case, the “scandalous” affair in question involves Ime Udoka.

In the meantime, thousands of kids in Mississippi are being represented in federal court. Officials in Jackson, Mississippi, allegedly knew of lead contamination in the city’s well water supply as far back as 2013.

More than a quarter of Flint residents satisfy the threshold for depression, it was revealed this week, five years after the city’s water catastrophe. Research conducted at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston found that one-fourth of these people exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder.

The potential for lead in the water in Flint to harm children’s development was long known. We were aware that the carelessness of a minority had jeopardized the future health of tens of thousands.

Natural catastrophes during pregnancy have been linked to an increased risk of mental health problems in later life, according to a study released this week.

When catastrophes result from human error, what does that tell us? It tells us PORK, that’s what. Yeah, Mississippi!

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“It’s Your World, You Decide!”

ISTHATPORKS TAKE:

Robbing the poor is one of the worst kinds of PORK a person can do. Brett Favre is now the poster boy for that "ALLEGED PORK." How he gets out of that one may be detailed in the quiet nature that your favorite news channels are displaying. What your favorite journalist is saying? What should be "LOUD NEWS" like REALLY LOUD NEWS is not talked about enough for our taste. Brett didn't even come out and make a statement about these allegations against himself. That surely doesn't look gd Brett. So we'll say what they should be saying and back it up with other notable people who allegedly did PORK things. Brett Favre's hall of fame should be revoked. Pete Rose hasn't even entered for his alleged PORK off the field. Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, Roger Clemens, and Barry Bonds will be kept out of the Hall of Fame because of PED connections. What's different with Favre? If we go over to Bill Cosby & R. Kelly for the alleged PORK towards other individuals, they both have been forever condemned. In Bill's case, much was taken from him. All in a lifetime. Both, however, fell from grace. So, when is that gonna happen to BRETT? He's already got away with the cell phone sex pictures in which he allegedly sent naked photos to a journalist he had the hots for. Like all situations, when you don't calibrate the individual as a deterrent, they'll keep coming back for more PORK. To us, that's what appears to be happening here. All news outlets should read" The dirty wealthy crucifies the poor". Shame on Brett for being a despicable person fronting like a nice guy. We'd like to see him not only get run over by the BUS for this, but get squashed by it. The nerve of him sitting on his wealth and allegedly stealing from the poor. He's showing that Mississippi, which has a long history of PORK, is still alive and well. He should have the "PORK AWARD!" and we made this PORK AWARD specifically designed for him. Grab it Brett don't be ashamed, take your bow, you proved in this moment you are deserving of a "FOOD YEARS DOWN!" until you prove you are deserving of a "FOOD YEARS UP!"

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Sports, Pork Award!

Now, Ain’t This Some PORK!!! …Washington Commanders fined coach Jack Del Rio $100,000 for calling the Capitol incident a “dust-up.”

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After Jack Del Rio, defensive coordinator for the Washington Commanders, called the deadly rebellion that occurred on January 6, 2021 a “dust-up,” the team announced that Del Rio would be fined $100,000.

The defensive coordinator for the Washington Commander saw parallels between the January 6, 2021 uprising and the upheaval that followed George Floyd’s assassination.

“I can look at images on the TV, people’s livelihoods are being destroyed, businesses are being burned down, no problem,” Del Rio said Wednesday. “And then we have a dust-up at the Capitol, nothing burned down, and we’re going to make that a major deal?”

Head coach Ron Rivera published a statement on Friday saying Del Rio’s comments do not reflect the views of the team or the organization and he is “disappointed” in Del Rio for making them. 

“What happened on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, was an act of domestic terrorism,” the statement said. 

The statement stated Del Rio “understands the contrast between the events of that tragic day and nonviolent protests, which are a hallmark of our democracy” and that Del Rio had apologized for his words.

Rivera stated in the statement,”Words have consequences and his words hurt a lot of people in our community,” Rivera said in the statement.

The team will give the $100,000 fine to the USCPMF.

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