Braves Remove All-Star Patches From Their Uniforms

Just days after Major League Baseball agreed to move the All-Star game out of Atlanta, the Braves responded by removing the All-Star Game patch from their uniforms. Man, that was quick.

After yesterday's 4-0 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies, Braves manager Brian Snitker had this to say about the game being moved:

"I'm disappointed that it's not going to be there, but I'm focused on playing baseball and what we've got going on this season. Other than being disappointed, that's all I have to say on it."

Who could blame him? There's not much anyone in the Atlanta community can really do here, other than give in to Democratic policy. After all, that was the plan when President Joe Biden pushed the commissioner to rob Atlanta of its All-Star Game in the first place: Follow agenda or else you lose $100 million of projected revenue.

It's a dictatorship. There's no other way to describe it.

Here's how it'll be covered:

Our mainstream media will push baseball as heroic for sacrificing business for "human rights." Instead of admitting that Republican leadership is their enemy, they hide behind being on "the right side of history." It's the easiest move to make because it requires absolutely zero courage, which is why celebrities echo the same sentiments.

It's too bad that "a stand for voter rights" materialized into pulling revenue from Atlanta, Georgia and perhaps moving it to Denver, Colorado. Black Lives Matter, they said.

Written by
Gary Sheffield Jr is the son of should-be MLB Hall of Famer, Gary Sheffield. He covers basketball and baseball for OutKick.com, chats with the Purple and Gold faithful on LakersNation, and shitposts on Twitter. You can follow him at GarySheffieldJr