Meet The Leftist Consultants Spoiling Beloved Video Games With In-Your-Face DEI

If Sweet Baby Inc.'s fetid leftist touch is associated with a game, it must be boycotted.

Brett Favre talks ‘Bountygate’ & two biggest career losses



The New Orleans Saints bounty scandal, also known as “Bountygate,” happened over 10 years ago — but NFL MVP Brett Favre has joined Jason Whitlock on “Fearless” to discuss it now.

The scandal itself was an incident in which Saints players were accused of being paid bonuses, or “bounties,” for purposely injuring players on opposing teams.

Favre says “Bountygate” doesn’t bother him, and Whitlock wants to know why.

“Why doesn’t the bounty thing bother you?” Whitlock asks.

“Well, I think they’re always out to get the quarterback or the star running back,” Favre says.

“I mean,” he continues, “there’s a way to do it, there’s a way not to do it. It’s the way the Saints did it was the way not to do it. But I can’t say that I was hit any different than I’ve been hit in my career up to that point.”

Favre recalls that early on in his career, he thought offering bounties was “just the way it was.”

According to Favre, past coaches would walk into the locker room and say things like, “‘You know we got the Kansas City Chiefs tomorrow, I got $5,000 for whoever takes Steve DeBerg out.’”

He says he just thought that “it was a way to motivate the guys to get the best player out of the game.”

While according to sources, Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma put a $10,000 bounty on Favre’s head, he says he’s not going to blame a loss on the bounty.

“I still had a chance to make a play. Just one play. I made some good ones, I played my heart out, but I needed one more, and I didn’t do it, and it wasn’t because of the bounty.”


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Trove of 1,000-year-old Viking coins discovered by young girl who was metal detecting near fortress in Denmark



Nearly 300 silver coins believed to be more than 1,000 years old were discovered near a Viking fortress in northwestern Denmark. The trove was unearthed by a young girl who was metal detecting in a cornfield last fall.

There were two treasure sites buried approximately 150 feet from each other near the Fyrkat Viking fortress in the town of Hobro in Denmark. The trove contained over 300 items, including Danish, German, and Arab coins.

\u201cYoung metal detectorist discovers 1,000-year-old Viking coins in Denmark https://t.co/wgly0kl70A\u201d
— CTV News (@CTV News) 1682198120

There were also decorated silver balls and cut-up silver jewelry, including large ring pins.

Fox News reported, "The pins were used by men at the top of society in Viking Age Ireland and neighboring islands. The museum said jewelry of this size and quality had been worn by bishops and kings, likely originating from a raiding expedition."

The Danish coins are called cross coins, which date back to the reign of King Harald Blåtand, or Harald Bluetooth in English. Blåtand allegedly created the cross coins in connection with his Christianization of the Danes. The cross coins were in circulation until Blåtand lost power to his son Svend Tveskæg in the mid-980s.

The North Jutland Museum said, "The treasures can, among other things, on the basis of coins minted under Harald Blåtand, be dated to the 980s - the same period when he built Fyrkat not far away."

"The two silver treasures in themselves represent an absolutely fantastic story, but to find them buried in a settlement just eight kilometers from Harald Bluetooth's Viking castle Fyrkat is incredibly exciting," North Jutland Museum archaeologist and curator Torben Trier Christiansen said in a statement.

"Perhaps the castles were not given up entirely voluntarily, and perhaps it happened in connection with the final showdown between Harald Blåtand and his son Svend Tveskæg. The Bramslev treasures were apparently buried around the same time or shortly after the castles were abandoned, and if there have been disturbances at Fyrkat, it makes good sense that the local magnate here at Bramslev has chosen to hide his valuables out of the way," Christiansen said.

The Museum of the Viking Age noted, "The Vikings believed that things they placed in the ground or in water would be found by the gods. So perhaps treasures were offerings to the gods. Gold and silver treasures were very valuable, so those who offered them must have some serious problems they needed the gods’ help to solve."

Archeologists will continue to excavate the area around the Viking fortress in hopes of finding more buried treasure.

The found artifacts will be on display this summer at the Aalborg Historical Museum.

The girl who made the discovery will receive financial compensation for the valuable artifacts, but the amount has yet to be been made public.

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Atlanta Falcons shut down facility after single confirmed COVID-19 case



The Atlanta Falcons have shut down the team's facility due to a confirmed COVID-19 case, according to various reports.

What are the details?

On Thursday morning, ESPN sports reporter Adam Schefter initially reported, "Falcons are shutting down their facility after multiple positive tests, sources tell ESPN."

However, NFL Network's Tom Pelissero wrote, "The #Falcons' one confirmed positive COVID-19 test today is not a player, per source. Team working remotely today as a precaution."

The #Falcons’ one confirmed new positive COVID-19 test today is not a player, per source. Team working remotely today as a precaution.
— Tom Pelissero (@Tom Pelissero)1602769131.0

ESPN later reported that the team shut the facility down out of an "abundance of caution" following news of the positive result.

In a statement published to Twitter, the Falcons said, "Out of an abundance of caution following one new positive test, we have made the decision to stop all in-person work at IBM Performance Field Thursday and will conduct all operations virtually."

The statement added, "This decision was made in consultation with the NFL and medical officials. The health and safety of our team is our highest priority."

Out of an abundance of caution following one new positive test, we have made the decision to stop all in-person wor… https://t.co/WwqtpE879I
— Atlanta Falcons (@Atlanta Falcons)1602768883.0

'Still working through details'

According to ESPN, sources told Schefter earlier Thursday that the team had "multiple positive tests" for COVID-19.

"One source told Schefter that there were four positive tests," the outlet reported, "but a Falcons official said the team is 'not at four confirmed.' The official also told Schefter that the Falcons are 'still working through details.'"

The outlet reported that two Atlanta Falcons players have tested positive for COVID-19 since the beginning of the regular season.

This Sunday's Falcons vs. Minnesota Vikings game in Minneapolis remains scheduled at the time of this reporting, according to NFL Network's Mike Garafolo.

In a tweet, Garafolo wrote, "From @NFLprguy: No change to #Falcons-#Vikings game at this time."

From @NFLprguy: No change to #Falcons-#Vikings game at this time.
— Mike Garafolo (@Mike Garafolo)1602770426.0