NFL commissioner Roger Goodell dismissed conspiracy theories about Taylor Swift and the Super Bowl outcome as "nonsense" as the countdown to the main event in Las Vegas begins.
Taylor Swift Conspiracy: As the countdown to the main event in Las Vegas begins, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell rejected conspiracy theories concerning Taylor Swift and the Super Bowl outcome as “nonsense” on Monday.
Goodell refuted the notion that Swift and Travis Kelce had a fabricated connection.
Their romance is a part of a plot, according to right-wing opponents, to rig the Super Bowl results and aid in US President Joe Biden’s reelection.
Goodell referred to the conversation as “nonsense” and stated, “I couldn’t have scripted that one.”
Swift’s blossoming romance with Kansas City Chiefs tight end Kelce has unexpectedly veered into the realm of political conspiracy theories this week, following the team’s Super Bowl run.
Numerous unfounded rumours surfaced on social media, the most prominent of which suggested that she and her boyfriend, a two-time Super Bowl champion, were important participants in a covert scheme to aid President Joe Biden in winning reelection in 2024.
The claims have been emphasised by right-wing politicians and media personalities, such as political activist Laura Loomer, anchor of One America News Network Alison Steinberg, and former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy.
The allegations could be a reflection of the right’s concern that Swift, whose historic Eras Tour is the first tour to earn a billion dollars, would really have an impact on the presidential election if she were to sway her horde of followers in one way.
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Swift and Kelce are in disagreement with the far-right due to their public remarks on politics and other matters.
When Swift declared on Instagram in 2018 that she would be voting for Tennessee’s Democratic Senate candidate Phil Bredesen and Democratic House incumbent Rep. Jim Cooper, she violated her long-standing taboo of talking about her political beliefs. She also attacked the Republican candidate at the time, then-U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn, pointing to Blackburn’s resistance to some LGBTQ+ rights and her vote against the Violence Against Women Act’s reauthorization in 2013. Blackburn was chosen to serve in the Senate.
In 2020, Swift said in an interview with V Magazine that “under their leadership, I believe America has a chance to start the healing process it so desperately needs.” She also backed Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
In September, Kelce came under fire for participating in an advertisement endorsing the COVID-19 and flu shots in tandem, as advised by the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. The advertisement was a collaboration with Pfizer, the drugmaker that created a vaccine in reaction to the epidemic and has since come to be associated with conspiracy theories and anti-vaccination advocates.
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