Miles Villar
1.6K posts

Miles Villar
@mailstormio
Email marketing specialist and baseball fanatic (Dodgers). Big shot at https://t.co/5zvxBCnBPw, proud father, and lover of great food and wine.


@HeyFitzy @BigJakeCLE @OriginalClady There is absolutely zero need for pride night in a baseball game. All it’s doing is creating division. You should read the scarlet letter. Them wearing their regular hat whilst e1 else wears their pride hat would have received tons of hate most likely from folks like you.

Looks to me like the @MLB is more interested in bending over for the LGBTQ mob than respecting the rights of American Christians. Interesting choice to make.


I have contacted the @SFGiants These three players are not multi millionaire players. They get the league minimum. Christians cannot be made to wear anything that is against their deeply held religious beliefs.


Three Giants pitchers wore Bible verses on their Pride Night caps during Friday’s game. MLB has since issued a warning to them.






Three Giants pitchers wore Bible verses on their Pride Night caps during Friday’s game. MLB has since issued a warning to them.


After three San Francisco Giants pitchers appeared in Friday’s game with Bible verses written on their Pride Night caps, MLB issued a warning that similar behavior will not be tolerated. More details: nyti.ms/4virvHy





@OriginalClady Disagree. Gay people are welcome to go to a sporting event pretty much anywhere and no one cares. But when I take my 8 year old to a game and have to explain what “Pride night” is about, I’m not cool with it. Sexuality can and should be private in my opinion




Three Giants pitchers wore Bible verses on their Pride Night caps during Friday’s game. MLB has since issued a warning to them.


MLB warned players that they violated league rules after three pitchers from the San Francisco Giants appeared in Friday’s game with Bible verses written on their ‘Pride Night’ caps, says similar behavior will not be tolerated.

Several Giants players wrote Bible verses on their caps to respond to Pride Night. The gesture echoed a familiar pattern: making a night meant for inclusion about something else entirely. Read more for free, from @GrantBrisbee: nyti.ms/3Q23q8J

















