WR Cole Beasley is back with the Bills.
Beasley un-retires, signs with his former team.
IG: buffalobills (12/14/22)
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from Israel

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Israel

seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Israel

seen from United States

seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
WR Cole Beasley is back with the Bills.
Beasley un-retires, signs with his former team.
IG: buffalobills (12/14/22)
Aaron Rodgers must have thought he was so clever, saying he was âimmunizedâ in August when asked, directly, if heâd been vaccinated against COVID-19.
Nancy Armour at USA Today, via Yahoo! Sports:
At least Kirk Cousins, Cole Beasley and the NFLâs other anti-science gurus had the decency to be transparent.
Aaron Rodgers must have thought he was so clever, saying he was âimmunizedâ when asked, directly, if heâd been vaccinated against COVID-19. But the Green Bay Packers quarterback isnât nearly as smart as he thinks he is, his âimmunizedâ comment and the âresearchâ he did revealed to be nothing more than smokescreen and snake oil with Wednesdayâs announcement that he has tested positive for COVID and reporting that he is not vaccinated.
Worse, the guy who loves to preach about the brotherhood of the locker room and the greater responsibility Packers players in particular have to the team they represent, has been exposed as a fraud.
âThe G thatâs on our helmet and on our jersey travels with you,â Rodgers said Thursday night, recounting what heâd told his teammates as they headed to their mini-bye after upsetting the Arizona Cardinals.
âRepresent the team the right way.â
How is lying â letâs call what Rodgers did for what it is â about being vaccinated against a disease that has killed more than 5 million people worldwide, almost 750,000 in the United States alone, representing the team the right way? How is exposing friends and teammates to COVID, as he might have done over the weekend, showing care for the well-being of those around him?
And how is not being available for what is arguably one of Green Bayâs biggest games this season, at Kansas City on Sunday, when the Packers were already short-handed, being the team leader that Rodgers supposedly prides himself on being?
When Rodgers was asked Aug. 26 about being vaccinated, he called it a âpersonal decision.â No. A personal decision is going ahead and having that fourth piece of pizza. Or spending money you really donât have. Or not cutting your hair for a year to pull off a desired Halloween costume.
When your âpersonal decisionâ has ramifications for those around you, however, it ceases to be personal. And, make no mistake, Rodgersâ decision to not get vaccinated, and then to lie about it, has ramifications for pretty much everyone around him.
There is Sundayâs game, of course, when Jordan Love will get his first NFL start in one of the leagueâs loudest stadiums. The NFL said in a statement Wednesday that it is on individual teams to enforce COVID protocols at their facilities, and that it would be "reviewing the matter" with the Packers.
[...]
If Rodgers truly believes in, say, a homeopathic remedy, then own that. Explain why he believes itâs preferable to one of the three vaccines recognized by the NFL and NFL Players Association. Enlighten us all as to what he trusts more than the advice of the worldâs most renowned scientific experts and medical professionals, who say vaccination provides the best defense against COVID-19.
Or maybe Rodgers, who has built a Hall of Fame career out of criticism of him, simply didnât want to take the heat. He knew heâd be criticized like Cousins, Beasley and other players who have resisted vaccines, particularly those whoâve spouted nonsense in their defense, and he didnât want to deal with it. Especially after an ugly off-season when he was so unhappy with the Packers front office that he contemplated retirement.
So he lied, thinking he could evade scrutiny as he does so many linebackers and defensive ends.
But this isn't a game.
Rodgersâ teammates might have known he wasnât vaccinated, but others who interacted with him didnât. Thought just the opposite, in fact, because of what Rodgers said in August and how heâs behaved since then.
Leaving that assumption uncorrected was both irresponsible and selfish. He put himself and others at risk, and deserves every bit of the criticism he once tried to avoid.
Packers QB Aaron Rodgers lied and deceived everyone with his foolishness by passing himself off as "vaccinated" when he really wasn't. I hope the NFL and the Packers lay down the law on him good for willfully circumventing the league's COVID protocols by fining him heavily and suspending Rodgers for the rest of the season.
Even Cole Beasley and Kirk Cousins were at least transparent with their anti-COVID vaxx foolishness.
Touchdown Cole Beasley!
Friends & rivals -- Sam and Josh trade jerseys after the game (12.29.19)
đđđ