Hi Luv.
Sez here this week that I am still on board with Washington Red’s Kins. Find a guy named Red and honor his family in the logo.
The “redskins” were called that because they painted themselves red to scare their enemies....then they killed them.
(not because the “evil white-man” thought their skin color was actually red)
The Cleveland Indians called themselves that because their famous star pitcher was a Penobscot Indian named Louis Sockalexis.
Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez who, as a tribal elder gets all the money he and his cronies need to live the life stye they have become accustomed to at tax payer expense, said ...
Many Japanese are now offended.
How about the ROYALS?
Fits in with washingtons self gloating image of kingly rule...fits in with idea of connecting amerasians as being noble. It would be self serving which has always been the rage.
Or the LOYALS.
Either way...the league is done. It actually thinks these “issues” matter. But they do not. I mean who really cares about a bunch of peeps...running...reaching...and diving...all to move an oblate spheroid in one direction without being stopped? Ultimately, it is just a time waster.
I suppose “F@#k you and the woke horse you rode in on” would never fit a jersey.
Savages?
Swamp Rats would work well.
Its a nice tribute, but the two word name itself sounds awkward to me.
Maybe it should be shortened to either:
Washington Talkers
or the
Washington Coders?
I propose; “The Washington Post Turtles”.
The Navahoes were the code talkers during WW2, not other tribes. So they want to be honored in the Indian nation at the expense of the other tribes. Is everything in this world of identity politics about tribal narcissism and being recognized as special whether Indian, black, disabled or transgender?
First Americans? I seriously doubt that.
How about the Noble Savages?
How about Swamp Things?
The Washington Cucks. Politicians standing by, watching us get f*cked.
The Navajo was nowhere around D.C. They have not voice in the matter.
http://www.ala.org/aboutala/indigenous-tribes-washington-dc
“The District of Columbia shares borders with Maryland and Virginia, and connect with lands along the Anacostia and Potomac River. These river systems and current national parks are where the Piscataway, Pamunkey, the Nentego (Nanichoke), Mattaponi, Chickahominy, Monacan, and the Powhatan cultures thrived.”
Washington First American Persons?
The Clovis People
“We’re just taking it back.”
Washington Cork Soakers.
Washington Foreskins.