| I think Lochte and buddies did far, far more harm to our image.. But that's just frat boy tomfoolery, right? |
| Where I'm from, we don't put our hand on our heart. I'm fine with Gabby's behavior. |
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Gabby is truly all kinds of awesome. The other athletes who didn't put their hands over their hearts have worked hard and sacrificed a LOT to compete on behalf of our country; they don't need to put their hands over their hearts to feel pride or demonstrate pride in their country.
Lochte is an embarrassing jerk dude-bro who lied and made the US look terrible. |
This isn't "PC nonsense," it's racist. |
Yeah, when did this change? I remember thinking that it was odd to put your hand over your heart for the anthem. In any event, she wasn't disrespectful at all - I fail to see the problem. |
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Yes, because that makes her unpatriotic. Let's conveniently forget that she is actually competing (and winning) for our country.
Unlike all the critics who only exercise social media patriotism. |
But there were several other athletes who also didn't put their hands over their hearts, and none of them were villi field the way Gabby was. Why? |
| Traditionally people have put their hands over their hearts for the Pledge of Allegiance, because they're making a pledge. When you're singing about the bombing of Baltimore harbor this doesn't seem so necessary, even if the song in question has special status. It's a song not a pledge. |
I disagree with you. All she does is whine about how she is picked on. |
You are such an ignorant civilian. Putting your hand over your heart is not a salute. As a civilian she isn't required to do anything and I think standing with your hands at your side or behind your back is appropriate. |
Respectfully, you don't have any sense. So just stop. If you don't put your hand over heart, you are spitting on the US? Really? |
It changed when candidate Obama stood at attention instead of putting his hand over his heart during the national anthem. It proved that he was a closeted Muslim and Kenyan. Prior to that, I was taught that you put your hand over your heart for the pledge and stand at attention for the anthem. Most people were fine with either. Now it's a way to point out why blacks aren't patriotic, while the white athletes who didn't do it were given a pass because of course they are patriotic. If people don't put their hands over their heart for the pledge, then I understand that as unpatriotic. This is just a way to cause controversy where there is none. |
| Another one who was taught the hand over heart for the Pledge of Allegiance, and just standing (respectfully) during the anthem. Don't get all the fuss. |
The I'm-more-patriotic-than-thou folks need to get over it. They're most likely Trump supporters who can't stand a black girl getting uppity. |
And my military up bringing says you stand at attention. Hand over heart is not correct. But you do you. |