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The Kansas City Chiefs logo features an arrowhead The drum used in the Chiefs’ chop. The Kansas City Chiefs are one of the professional sports teams involved in the controversy regarding the use of Native American names and imagery, but received less attention than other teams until 2013 when fan behavior at games, including stereotypical ...
A Native American rights group is planning a protest on Sunday urging the Kansas City Chiefs to retire the team's name and stop fans from using an in-game tomahawk chop ahead of Super Bowl LV in ...
Two Kansas City groups continue to protest the Chiefs’ use of Native American imagery in the team name and cheer. Why billboards urging Chiefs to ‘change the name and stop the chop’ return ...
Kansas City Chiefs vs. Washington Football Team in 2021. Washington eliminated all Native American imagery from its temporary franchise name while Kansas City continues to use the "Chiefs" branding. The Kansas City Chiefs tomahawk chop has been described by the Native American group Not In Our Honor as synchronized racism.
The Kansas City Chiefs' Tomahawk chop, which has been described by the Kansas City Indian Center as synchronized racism [293] For various reasons, the team has faced charges of racism and anti-Indigenous cultural appropriation and misuse of names, symbols, and practices.
When the Kansas City Chiefs take the field at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday, thousands of fans will see the culmination of five decades of striving for the NFL's ultimate stage: the Super Bowl.
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The Kansas City Chiefs NFL team was named by Bartle, while he was mayor there, from his nickname as founder of Mic-O-Say. BSA, Mic-O-Say, and the Chiefs have been widely criticized for cultural appropriation of native tribes.