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Gotta love these losers' way of thinking. They think it is American, patriotic even, to make anti-war comments. They are basketball players, not foreign policy analysts, but let's let it go, in the name of the freedom of speech. So what are disgruntled fans to do when they don't like something their team's player does? They boo them. They, as paying customers to the team, as the people who indirectly pay the players' salaries, if they want to boo the player, isn't that their right?
What makes these morons think that they can say anything they want and get away with it, never having to face any negative reaction for it?
Van Exel's night vexing despite solid play
The game also served to take Van Exel's mind off the tempest that he created when he said on his radio show Wednesday that President Bush "is giving American people a bad name." He was booed on a couple of occasions early in the game against the Spurs, presumably by those who had heard or read his comments.Posted by shanti at March 23, 2003 10:05 AM"I was very shocked, and very disappointed because I didn't want that to happen," Van Exel said. "That was the last thing I wanted to have happen. It kind of hurt me because it was like I was anti-American. And that's not it at all."
Asked if he regretted saying it, he said: "That's not even the point. The point is I was upset with the reaction it had because I didn't want it to be a negative reaction."
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